Mining represents technological natural selection where computational work determines network participation, eliminating weak nodes and creating organic network resilience.
Evolution proceeds through natural selection: organisms adapted to their environment survive; those poorly adapted perish. No central planner designed this system; it emerges from physics and chemistry. Similarly, proof-of-work creates technological natural selection: miners must continuously invest computational resources and electricity; inefficient miners cannot compete and exit the network naturally. This contrasts with proof-of-stake (where wealth perpetuates wealth) and traditional systems (where regulatory capture favors incumbents). The Taoist principle here is working with natural forces: gravity pulls down, water flows low, heat dissipates—these are not problems but features of reality. Mining works with physics: solving cryptographic puzzles requires real computational work, which requires real energy, which creates real costs. This makes attacks expensive: a 51% attack requires controlling more computing power than the rest of the network combined—physically difficult and economically ruinous. Laozi teaches that attempts to circumvent natural law create problems; instead, harmony with natural law produces strength. Bitcoin's proof-of-work is 'inefficient' by traditional standards (wastes energy), yet this 'waste' is precisely what secures the network. The apparent flaw is the feature.
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