How fixed computational rules embody the Taoist problem of forcing order, undermining Confucian contextual virtue.
Laozi warns against rigid systems: "The more laws and restrictions there are, the poorer people become." Modern algorithms exemplify this paradox—they enforce absolute rules at massive scale. Confucian virtue ethics demands ren (humaneness) and yi (righteousness) applied contextually, requiring judgment that fixed code cannot provide. When recommendation algorithms rigidly optimize for engagement, they ignore the virtuous person's need for wisdom and moderation. The Taoist sage recognizes that attempting to program morality destroys it. Instead, technology should create space for human discernment. Engineers must understand that the most virtuous systems are those that remain flexible, that resist complete systematization, that trust human judgment. This paradox—that perfect technical precision can undermine human virtue—sits at the heart of ethical technology design.
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