Laozi's both/and thinking reveals how industrial advancement simultaneously destroys and creates, requiring acceptance of irreconcilable tensions.
Laozi teaches that all things contain their opposites: growth carries decay, gain carries loss. The Industrial Revolution exemplifies this paradox perfectly. Factories increased material abundance while fragmenting community; machines eliminated drudgery while creating new forms of servitude; global trade enriched nations while impoverishing artisans. Western thought demands choosing sides—progress is good, tradition bad—but Taoist wisdom acknowledges both truths simultaneously. The human cost wasn't incidental to industrialization; it was the shadow side of the same coin that brought efficiency. Recognizing this paradox doesn't paralyze action but clarifies moral reality: we cannot have the material benefits of industry without accepting its costs. This acceptance, painful as it is, prevents the delusion that technological solutions alone will restore what was lost. Wisdom lies in acknowledging the irreducible trade-off.
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