Laozi's cyclical view of time applied to algorithmic politics: designing systems with natural rhythms of amplification and dampening rather than constant acceleration.
Taoist philosophy embraces cyclical time—seasons, tides, breaths—where periods of activity alternate naturally with periods of rest. Modern algorithmic politics treats time as linear and accelerating, with permanent outrage cycles and endless content feeds. Laozi teaches that sustainable systems require rhythm and recuperation. Applied to political algorithms, this means designing systems that amplify important civic discussions for bounded periods, then allow them to naturally decay, giving attention space to emerge and settle. Rather than algorithmic feeds that treat all moments as equally important, temporal cycling would recognize natural political rhythms: election seasons differ from ordinary governance; crisis demands differ from routine policy debate. Algorithms that honor these natural temporal patterns would reduce decision fatigue, prevent chronic outrage, and allow political discourse to breathe and regenerate authentic engagement.
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