Understanding political engagement as natural cyclical flow rather than constant activation reveals how algorithms should work with electoral rhythms.
The Taoist sage observes that all things flow in cycles: day and night, seasons, political engagement naturally ebbs and flows. Modern algorithmic politics attempts to maintain constant activation, treating disengagement as failure. Laozi would see this as fighting the Tao. Electoral cycles have natural rhythms—periods of intense focus around elections, quieter periods for deliberation and community building. Algorithms designed to force constant engagement exhaust citizens and reduce the quality of political thought. Instead, platforms aligned with temporal flow would amplify political content when natural interest peaks, support community deliberation during quieter periods, and respect that not all citizens need constant mobilization. This approach acknowledges human nature rather than demanding citizens remain perpetually activated. The result: more authentic engagement and stronger democratic foundations built on natural rhythms rather than algorithmic compulsion.
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