Understanding technology through cycles and feedback loops rather than linear progress, reflecting Indigenous time consciousness.
Laozi's philosophy views time as cyclical—seasons return, patterns repeat at different scales. Indigenous technologies operate within recursive temporal patterns: seasonal burning cycles, tidal systems, crop rotations that repeat across generations. Western technology assumes linear time: yesterday's tools become obsolete, progress moves only forward. This mindset created planned obsolescence and discarded Indigenous knowledge as primitive. Temporal recursion recognizes that the same principles operate across timescales—daily, seasonal, generational, epochal. Indigenous technologies embody this understanding: a basket-weaving technique repeated identically across centuries maintains its effectiveness because it harmonizes with deeper patterns. Laozi teaches that those who flow with time's natural cycles achieve more than those fighting against them. By adopting cyclical time consciousness, we can design technologies meant to last centuries, create maintenance practices that strengthen communities through repetition, and value endurance over novelty.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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