A pendulum can be seen as a physical metaphor for the wisdom of Tao Te Ching: the farther it swings toward one extreme, the more naturally it is drawn back toward the other. The Tao Te Ching repeatedly cautions against excess, force, and imbalance, teaching that reality tends to restore harmony through its own movement. Just as a pendulum does not need to be pushed at every moment but follows a natural rhythm governed by underlying laws, the sage is encouraged to live in accord with the Tao, allowing action to arise from balance rather than struggle. In this sense, the pendulum illustrates the Taoist insight that opposites generate and complete one another, and that equilibrium emerges not through control but through alignment with the natural way.
>>17003153From this we have determined it is only perfectly natural to combat your enemy after he has came and destroyed your lands and murdered your people and you have castrated yourself and you find yourself bound in sacrifice to his god. Only then will you understand the magnificent tao.
>>17003161>I can't readWhy are you on >>>/sci/ then? Go back to school.