Neither users nor platforms are innocent; both adapt to exploit each other in a degrading feedback loop that Taoism recognizes as imbalanced systems.
The Taoist perspective rejects both technological determinism ('platforms made us this way') and individual blame ('users are just addicted'). Instead, Laozi teaches that systems drift toward imbalance when any party gains excessive power. Social media creates reciprocal corruption: platforms engineer addictive features while users sacrifice authenticity for engagement metrics; platforms exploit psychological vulnerabilities while users demand dopamine hits; algorithms amplify outrage while users share rage-inducing content. Neither drives the system alone; both participate in degrading each other. This corruption accelerates because the system lacks feedback mechanisms that self-correct. The Taoist solution isn't perfect regulation or individual willpower but disrupting the feedback loop itself. This requires active disengagement: reduced usage, platform diversity, community spaces outside algorithmic control, and deliberate cultivation of non-commodified social spaces. You cannot expect platforms designed for exploitation to suddenly become healthy through policy alone. Nor can individuals resist systems architected for addiction through discipline alone. The imbalance must be addressed systemically by choosing alternative structures and protecting spaces where corruption cannot take root.
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