Pu, the uncarved block: presenting raw, unfiltered data and letting communities interpret meaning rather than imposing curated narratives.
Pu, the uncarved block, represents potential before human shaping. In Taoist philosophy, the uncarved block possesses natural completeness; carving it into predetermined forms limits its possibility. Applied to knowledge platforms, this suggests the value of raw data, primary sources, and unfiltered datasets that communities can interpret freely. Before printing, knowledge existed in manuscripts shaped by individual scribes' interpretations. The press enabled distribution of multiple copies of the same text, but democratization deepened when raw data became accessible—scientific measurements, historical documents, statistical records. Users carve their own meaning from unfiltered materials. Wikipedia's power lies partly in hosting reference materials; blockchain systems offer uninterpreted transaction records. The tension exists between curation (helpful shaping) and control (limiting interpretation). The principle suggests defaulting toward leaving blocks uncarved—providing raw materials and trusting communities' collective intelligence to find patterns. This requires accepting messiness and multiple simultaneous interpretations.
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