Taoist cyclical cosmology offers an alternative to linear progress narratives that justify present extraction as inevitable advance.
Taoism views time as cyclical: seasons cycle, dynasties rise and fall, yin and yang alternate. This contrasts sharply with progress narratives that justify present actions as necessary steps toward inevitable, superior futures. Laozi's teaching suggests history has no predetermined direction—civilizations can flourish or collapse, knowledge can be lost, cycles can reverse. For intergenerational thinking, cyclical time is liberating and sobering. It means: there is no inevitable forward march that justifies present harms; future generations may value what we dismiss, lose what we assume permanent, or face conditions where our innovations prove irrelevant. This philosophical stance cultivates humility about our era's trajectory. It suggests that the 7th generation may need skills we've abandoned (resilience, self-sufficiency, repair) more than technologies we've perfected. Cyclical thinking invites us to design for reversibility, redundancy, and the possibility that some cycles may turn backward—making adaptability across multiple futures more valuable than optimization for one predicted path.
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