Industrial rhythms violate natural human cycles; Laozi's time philosophy exposes the pathology of mechanized temporal control.
Laozi understands time as cyclical, organic, and respectful of natural rhythms—seasons, growth periods, rest. Industrial capitalism imposed linear, accelerating, mechanical time: clocks, schedules, quotas, constant increase. Workers' bodies were forced into unnatural rhythm. Children worked sixteen hours in mills, their natural development sacrificed to machine output. Circadian rhythms ignored; seasons irrelevant; rest denied. This temporal violence was perhaps industrialization's deepest injury: it colonized the one resource all humans must inhabit—their own lived time. Laozi would recognize this as profound violation of the Tao. The body cannot be forced into perpetual productivity without catastrophic cost: industrial accidents, stunted growth, shortened lifespans, psychological fragmentation. Modern labor movements, weekend victories, and child labor laws represent hard-won recovery of temporal autonomy. Yet industrial logic persists: now we are trapped not by factory clocks but by always-on devices. The principle remains: forcing unnatural pace creates suffering and ultimately, system dysfunction.
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