Mining Dao
Extracting Formal Laws from Dao Maxims
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Lu par :
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Brian Wright
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De :
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Boris Kriger
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This book introduces a new methodological discipline aimed at one of the oldest yet least formalized domains of human knowledge: accumulated wisdom. Proverbs, maxims, doctrines, and cultural aphorisms are usually treated as literary artifacts, moral advice, or objects of interpretation. This work proposes a different approach. It treats them as compressed carriers of structural constraints—residues of repeated interaction with reality that have survived selection across generations.
The central claim of the book is not that traditional wisdom is true by authority, but that its persistence signals the presence of underlying formal regularities. The task, therefore, is not interpretation but extraction. Through a systematic process of de-rhetorization, assumption isolation, system reduction, and formalization, colloquial insights are transformed into general laws applicable beyond their original cultural or linguistic context.
The book rigorously separates meaning from structure and belief from constraint. It does not defend metaphysical doctrines, ethical systems, or theological claims. Instead, it offers a neutral methodology for identifying rules that govern stability, failure, adaptation, and coordination in complex systems. These laws may coincide with known results in mathematics, physics, economics, or systems theory, or they may appear as newly articulated constraints that were previously embedded only in narrative form.
By refusing both relativism and dogmatism, the work positions itself between the humanities and the formal sciences. It argues that wisdom does not need to be revered to be useful, and that formalization does not destroy depth when applied with discipline. The result is not a collection of interpretations, but a toolkit: a method for converting cultural memory into reusable, provable, and transferable knowledge.