Bitcoin's immutable protocol as the uncarved block—its power derives from never being shaped by external forces.
The uncarved block, or pu, symbolizes Taoist wholeness before it is cut and carved into specific forms. Bitcoin's original protocol design, largely frozen by community consensus, represents this principle: the protocol's strength comes from its refusal to be continually reshaped. Immutability isn't rigidity; it's integrity. Bitcoin's lack of governance mechanism—its resistance to change—paradoxically makes it more stable and decentralized than protocols with active governance. When protocols constantly evolve to address every proposed improvement, they become vehicles for power politics. Laozi taught that the most enduring systems preserve their essential nature. Bitcoin's immutability forces innovation to occur at higher layers (Lightning Network, Taproot enhancements) rather than core protocol modification. This principle challenges the modern impulse to optimize everything; true decentralization may require accepting constraints and imperfections. The uncarved block teaches that decentralized systems gain power from what they refuse to do.
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