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From Taoist Indeterminacy to Procedural Adulthood Laozi, Mencius, and the
Druid Finn By Victor Langheld
“The practical message is
contradictive.” This
criticism, directed at the practical teaching of the Tao Te
Ching, becomes the starting point for a much larger philosophical
reconstruction. What initially appears to be a minor objection — namely that
the Tao Te Ching contains internally conflicting
advice — eventually unfolds into a developmental theory of human cognition,
civilisation, and survival itself. The issue
is not that Laozi’s individual insights are false. On the contrary, many are
extraordinarily perceptive: ·
avoid excess, ·
remain flexible, ·
reduce unnecessary force, ·
distrust rigidity, ·
adapt fluidly, ·
preserve energy, ·
yield strategically. Individually,
these are often excellent tactical observations. Mammals that cannot adapt
break under environmental pressure. Water survives because it yields. Reeds
bend while rigid trees snap. The Taoist instinct for flexibility is deeply
grounded in biological survival logic. The
problem emerges when these observations are assembled into a supposed
philosophy of life. As a
total system, the Tao Te Ching often appears
undecisive because it lacks a clearly articulated structural goal capable of
hierarchically organising its recommendations. One
passage praises withdrawal. The text
oscillates between: ·
passivity and strategic action, ·
retreat and influence, ·
anti-structure and governance, ·
humility and tactical superiority. Why does
this happen? Because
the Tao Te Ching never decisively specifies: ·
what the human ultimately is, ·
what the human is for, ·
or what final structural criterion determines
successful action. Without
such a criterion, its practical advice remains atmospheric rather than
architectonic. Its
wisdom functions as heuristic fragments rather than as an integrated
systems-engineering framework. This
leads to the central criticism: The Apophatic Origin of the Problem The
practical indeterminacy of Taoism originates in its foundational maxim: “The Way
that can be named is not the constant Way.” This
sentence establishes the entire orientation of classical Taoism. But its
structure is fundamentally apophatic. The decisive
phrase is: “is not.” The named
way is separated from the supposedly “constant” way. Thus
reality divides into: ·
the describable, ·
and the allegedly real but indescribable. This
generates a hidden dualism: ·
appearance versus ground, ·
named versus real, ·
language versus truth, ·
concept versus actuality. The Tao
itself is never positively defined. Instead it is
protected through negation: ·
beyond names, ·
beyond concepts, ·
beyond fixed description. But this produces
a profound consequence. Once the
highest principle becomes undefinable, the practical system built upon it
loses decisive structure. The centre cannot fully organise the periphery
because the centre itself remains semantically indeterminate. The Tao becomes an elastic placeholder. This
explains the contradictory atmosphere of Taoist advice. Since the
foundational principle remains undefined, no single tactical recommendation
can claim ultimate priority. Thus: ·
flexibility is praised, ·
but so is hidden power, ·
simplicity is praised, ·
but so is strategic rulership, ·
withdrawal is praised, ·
but so is subtle influence. The
system survives through interpretive elasticity. Its
ambiguity is not accidental. Finn’s Reconstruction: From Negation to Qualification The druid
Finn’s Procedure
Monism attacks this structure directly. Instead
of: “The Way that can be named
is not the constant Way,” Finn
reformulates the maxim as: “The Way that can be named
is the constant Way, named.” This
modification appears small but is philosophically devastating. The original
Taoist formula excludes the named world from the “real” Tao. Finn’s
reconstruction abolishes that exclusion. The named
world is not false. It is the
Way under local descriptive constraint. Thus Finn replaces: ·
negation, ·
qualification. Not: “this is not the Tao,” but: “this is the Tao appearing locally.” This move
eliminates the hidden dualism at the heart of classical Taoism. There is no
inaccessible metaphysical beyond. There is
only: ·
one universal procedural structure, ·
generating bounded local renderings. Naming
becomes one procedural activity among others. Language
is not outside reality. Laozi as Mammalian Survival Intelligence This
reinterpretation allows the Taoist system to be repositioned evolutionarily. Laozi can
now be understood as articulating a mammalian survival strategy. His
philosophy is not really a total civilisational architecture. It is adaptive
organismic wisdom. The
Taoist sage survives by: ·
reducing friction, ·
conserving energy, ·
avoiding rigid conflict, ·
adapting fluidly to environmental pressure. This is
profoundly mammalian behaviour. A deer
survives not by ideological commitment but by adaptive responsiveness. Thus Laozi’s wisdom corresponds
to what might be called: ·
survival infancy, ·
baseline organismic intelligence. The
organism has not yet attempted to engineer civilisation. It merely seeks
sustainable continuity under fluctuating conditions. This
explains why the Tao Te Ching often distrusts: ·
intellectual abstraction, ·
heavy law, ·
moral rigidity, ·
excessive structure. These
things frequently reduce adaptive flexibility. Laozi therefore
optimises persistence, not civilisation. Mencius and the Civilising of the Mammal Mencius
enters at the next developmental stage. Mencius
recognises a problem Taoism cannot fully solve: Civilisation
requires: ·
role stability, ·
behavioural predictability, ·
trust, ·
institutions, ·
education, ·
intergenerational continuity. Thus Mencius introduces: ·
morality, ·
ethics, ·
ritual, ·
humane governance, ·
self-cultivation. These are
artificial constraint systems imposed upon raw mammalian adaptability. From
Finn’s Procedure Monism perspective, they are not eternal truths descending
from heaven. They are locally expedient coherence technologies. Mencius
therefore represents: ·
adolescence. The
adolescent phase is defined by: ·
socialisation, ·
external rules, ·
identity formation, ·
behavioural regulation, ·
moral scripting. The human
mammal becomes domesticated into civilisational functionality. Unlike
Laozi’s adaptive drifter, Mencius seeks: ·
cultivated humans, ·
stable families, ·
moral rulers, ·
coherent societies. He
transforms: ·
survival instinct ·
socially coordinated existence. But
Mencius still grounds his system in moral metaphysics: For Finn,
this remains insufficiently structural. Goodness
itself must be proceduralised. Finn and Procedural Adulthood Finn
represents the third developmental threshold: At this
level, the individual no longer merely: ·
survives adaptively, ·
obeys inherited moral systems. Instead the individual perceives
the structural conditions generating both. This is
the emergence of procedural literacy. The adult
recognises: ·
Taoism, ·
Confucianism, ·
morality, ·
politics, ·
religion, ·
identity, ·
and civilisation itself as
adaptive survival renderings generated under constraints. This does
not mean these systems are false. It means
they are local procedural constructions rather than eternal absolutes. Finn
therefore provides: ·
structural ontology, ·
generative architecture, ·
systems insight, ·
procedural causation. But — and
this is crucial — he does not provide a universal local solution. Why not? Because Procedure Monism itself
forbids it. A
universal behavioural prescription would contradict the reality of differing: ·
environments, ·
constraints, ·
energy distributions, ·
competitive conditions, ·
and survival pressures. Thus adulthood necessarily
leaves local options open. This
openness is not indecision. The
mature systems engineer understands: ·
no tactic is universally correct, ·
no morality universally sufficient, ·
no civilisation eternally stable. Every
local solution is context-dependent. The Three Levels of Human Development The
resulting developmental structure becomes remarkably clear. Level 1 — Laozi: Infancy The
organism learns: survive
through adaptation. This is
baseline mammalian intelligence. Level 2 — Mencius: Adolescence The
organism learns: stabilise
cooperative society through behavioural regulation. This is
civilisational domestication. Level 3 — Finn: Adulthood The
organism learns: understand
the structure generating all adaptive systems. This is
procedural awareness. Or more
compactly: ·
Laozi teaches how mammals survive. ·
Mencius teaches how societies stabilise mammals. ·
Finn explains why both inevitably emerge. The Cost of Adulthood Yet
adulthood carries a severe cost. Once
procedural structure is seen clearly: ·
innocence collapses, ·
absolutes weaken, ·
metaphysical guarantees disappear. The adult
can no longer fully believe: ·
“Heaven commands,” ·
“The Tao wills,” ·
“Morality is eternal,” ·
or “society is sacred.” He sees
systems as generated adaptive constructions. But
unlike nihilism, Finn’s adulthood does not destroy meaning. It
proceduralises meaning. Meaning
becomes: ·
functional coherence relative to goals and
constraints. Not
divine decree. The adult
therefore inherits both: ·
freedom, ·
responsibility. He can no
longer hide inside inherited scripts. That is
why Finn necessarily leaves survival options open. Not
because structure disappears,
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