Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Non-Comparison in an Algorithm of Comparison

Applying Taoist acceptance to resist the constant comparative measuring that social platforms engineer, which fuels loneliness and inadequacy.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Taoism teaches that comparing separate things obscures the underlying unity of existence and creates unnecessary suffering. Yet social media's entire architecture is comparative: metrics that rank our worth, feeds that present others' highlights alongside our reality, and algorithmic curation that makes us visible only if we outcompete. This constant comparison is a primary driver of loneliness and depression among social media users. Laozi's wisdom invites a radical non-comparison: recognizing that your path is uniquely yours, that another's success doesn't diminish your worth, and that the ranking of humans according to metrics is fundamentally misguided. This isn't about denial; it's about cognitive liberation from the comparative framework itself. The loneliness we experience on social media stems from internalizing the platform's comparative logic, then finding ourselves perpetually lacking. The Taoist antidote is threefold: limiting exposure to algorithmic feeds designed for comparison, actively cultivating appreciation for others' journeys without measuring against them, and reconnecting with intrinsic values that exist outside any ranking system. When we stop comparing, we stop competing—and genuine connection becomes possible.

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Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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