Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Returning to the Root: Cyclical Anticipation

The understanding that futures emerge cyclically from repeated patterns; anticipation means recognizing recurring rhythms rather than assuming linear progress.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Taoist philosophy rejects linear time—the assumption that history moves forever forward in one direction. Instead, reality cycles: seasons return, dynasties rise and fall, expansion follows contraction. This cyclical view fundamentally changes how you anticipate. Rather than asking "what comes next in an unprecedented direction," ask "which recurring patterns are expressing themselves now?" Markets cycle between excess and correction. Technologies go from revolutionary to commodified to obsolete. Relationships oscillate between proximity and distance. Individual development cycles through expansion and consolidation. Recognizing these cycles prevents surprise at inevitable turns. You anticipate downturns by understanding that growth cannot continue indefinitely, recessions by recognizing that contraction creates opportunity, personal stagnation by expecting necessary fallow periods. This cyclical lens also reveals hidden returns: seemingly obsolete wisdom becomes relevant again, abandoned strategies resurface with new relevance, old problems require renewed attention. By studying what has returned before, you read the future with greater accuracy, preparing not for permanent progress but for the eternal dance of returning to roots.

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