Mapping how contemplative practice moves through time in phases rather than linear progression, informed by Taoist cyclical time.
Unlike Western linear temporality, Taoist philosophy understands time as cyclical flow—seasons returning, patterns recurring, energy ebbing and flowing. Buddhist contemplative computing must honor this deeper rhythm rather than imposing artificial temporal structures. Meditation itself demonstrates natural temporal phases: settling, deepening, returning. Technology platforms designed for practice often mistake clock-time for genuine temporal flow, fragmenting experience into arbitrary intervals. Laozi's understanding of time as the natural unfolding of the Tao suggests that computational systems should accommodate natural rhythms of attention and energy rather than mechanical schedules. Temporal flow states describe how practitioners move through contemplative cycles: initiation, stability, deepening, and emergence. These aren't linear stages but recursive patterns. By designing interfaces and features around these natural temporal flows—rather than productivity metrics and notification schedules—Buddhist contemplative systems align with how awareness actually unfolds. This creates space for genuine practice to deepen without technological interruption.
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