Unchanging foundation: blockchain's immutability reflects the Taoist pu—the uncarved block—preserving integrity through refusal to alter what has been recorded.
Pu, the uncarved block, symbolizes pristine potential and integrity in Taoist philosophy. Before society shapes and judges, before institutions carve rules and impose order, the uncarved block represents pure, incorruptible nature. Blockchain immutability embodies pu: once a transaction is recorded and confirmed, it cannot be altered, reversed, or expunged. This immutability is not a limitation but a strength. Centralized systems promise to fix mistakes through administrative reversal—a bank can dispute a transaction, a platform can delete a post. This flexibility creates vulnerability: administrators can be corrupted, courts can be pressured, history can be rewritten. Blockchain refuses this malleability. Once carved into the ledger, events remain immutable. Laozi teaches that excessive intervention corrupts natural order; preservation of original nature maintains integrity. This principle applies to financial history: immutability prevents fraud, protects against retroactive seizure, and ensures that records cannot be politically altered. The cost is that genuine errors cannot be erased. Yet this cost is acceptable because it prevents the deeper corruption of discretionary alteration. By maintaining the uncarved block's integrity, blockchain creates trust through unchangeability, sacrificing flexibility to preserve truth.
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