Time, history, and how we understand them

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Daohe · Jun 5, 2025
Since the dawn of human civilization, history has carried people’s collective memory and experience. People have long tried to draw lessons from it, hoping to avoid repeating past mistakes and to push society forward. Yet when we look back across thousands of years, the rise and fall of dynasties, the cycles of war and peace, […]

Since the dawn of human civilization, history has carried people’s collective memory and experience. People have long tried to draw lessons from it, hoping to avoid repeating past mistakes and to push society forward. Yet when we look back across thousands of years, the rise and fall of dynasties, the cycles of war and peace, of tyranny and resistance, seem to return again and again, as if history were moving in recurring patterns.

The root cause does not lie in history itself, but in the way we perceive it.

When we place history on a timeline, it turns into something we can analyze, categorize, and interpret. It allows us to see how civilizations have grown and to understand the forces that shaped their institutions.

When we use past experience as a direct analogy for the present, we easily slip into a fatalistic mindset. History then appears as nothing more than a cycle of inevitability, and its lessons rarely turn into real institutional reform or breakthroughs in understanding.

This article begins with these two different ways of viewing history and explores how they shape our understanding of civilization, our collective psychology, and the institutions we build. It also seeks to answer a central question: Why do we often recognize the lessons of history, yet still find ourselves trapped in the recurring dilemmas of civilization?

I. History in sequence: restoring reality and tracing paths

Placing history along a timeline is a rational and systematic way of observing it. Grounded in facts, it unfolds events in chronological order, turning the past from vague legends or emotional recollections into historical realities that can be analyzed and understood, with clear patterns of causality and structure.

The core value of this approach lies in three aspects:

  • Seeing history in its full complexity:
    No turning point in history ever happened in isolation. Each was shaped by a web of factors, both internal and external. Looking at history through a timeline makes it easier to uncover these causes and developments, and it helps us avoid oversimplifying or taking things out of context.
  • Tracing the paths of civilization:
    By comparing events across regions and following their progression over time, we can sketch out the journey of humanity—from small tribes to great empires, and eventually to modern civilization. This perspective offers guidance for how today’s societies can better define their place, design their systems, and shape their social structures.
  • Turning lessons into action:
    When history is grounded in concrete facts, its lessons become more than abstract warnings. They can serve as foundations for real decisions. The Great Depression of 1929, for example, pushed modern states to create systems of economic regulation, while the devastation of World War II led the international community to establish frameworks for balance of power and global cooperation.

The value of the timeline perspective is that it resists treating history as the repetition of fate. Instead, it draws attention to the role of changing variables.

It recognizes that history is open-ended and that civilizations can follow many different paths. It emphasizes human agency and the weight of institutional choices.

Progress is not dictated by some fixed “law of history,” but by how we face the present, learn from the past, and shape the future.

II. Seeing history within history: cycles of experience and the trap of fate

In contrast to the rational, timeline-based approach, a more common way of understanding history is to read the present through the patterns of the past. People look for “laws” distilled from earlier events and try to use them as guides for today.

The driving force behind this way of thinking is humanity’s natural fear of uncertainty. Faced with a complex and shifting reality, we instinctively reach for familiar experiences to explain the present and predict what comes next. This search for certainty, however, easily slips into the abyss of fatalism.

This tendency shows up in several ways:

  • Historical lessons are often oversimplified.
    Phrases like “what rises must fall,” “poverty breeds chaos,” or “the world moves in cycles” are frequently treated as universal truths. When similar signs appear today, people tend to rely on these old patterns, ignoring new factors and the unique circumstances of the present, which leads to stagnant thinking.
  • Current problems are normalized.
    When society faces corruption, rigid social hierarchies, or abuse of power, many respond with phrases like “it has always been this way” or “history repeats itself,” as if these issues are inevitable and require no real action or reform. This mindset allows problems to persist and crises to remain hidden.
  • 3. Civilization falls into self-replication and path dependency.
    When collective thinking is trapped by historical patterns, it becomes difficult for a civilization to explore new directions. The two World Wars of the 20th century, for example, were in some ways a continuation of 19th-century imperialist expansion under a new historical context.

Ultimately, reading history through history carries a profound danger: it turns historical lessons into seemingly immutable laws, sapping contemporary society of the will to correct mistakes and drive change.

III. Why history teaches but fails to change us

Why does human society repeatedly encounter similar disasters yet fail to learn from them? The problem is not that history is unclear; rather, within civilization, there exist three deep-rooted mechanisms that systematically dilute—or even block—the lessons of the past from being passed on and applied.

1. The self-preserving mechanism of power

Rulers and entrenched interest groups often manipulate or even distort historical truths to maintain their grip on power. The fall of a previous dynasty, for example, might be explained as “the mandate of heaven ended” or “the people’s hearts were unpredictable,” rather than as a result of institutional collapse or social imbalance.

This selective retelling of history essentially serves to undermine the legitimacy of change and preserve the existing order.

2. The inertia of collective thinking

Public consciousness tends to favor familiar, linear explanations that align with traditional experience, while remaining wary of complexity and uncertainty. This cognitive inertia makes society more inclined to accept fatalistic narratives like “what rises must fall,” rather than probing the specific institutional failures behind events.

Over time, historical experience becomes simplified into patterns, serving more as a form of psychological comfort than as a practical guide for action.

3. The mechanism of controlling the narrative

Whoever controls the narrative controls the meaning of history. In most societies, history is written by official sources, while reflective voices from the public are marginalized or even suppressed. As a result, even when real lessons exist, they rarely make their way into mainstream education or public discourse, cutting off access to collective awareness.

These three mechanisms intertwine, making it difficult for civilizations to develop effective self-correction. History is not only forgotten—it is formatted and exploited, becoming a tool to perpetuate old patterns rather than a resource to open new paths.

Consequently, even when disasters recur, society may still choose familiar but failed approaches, falling into cycles that seem, again and again, “inevitable.”

IV. Realistic pathways for civilization to break through

To truly learn from history, civilization must break free from both blind reliance on past experience and fatalistic thinking, returning to an understanding of history rooted in facts, logic, and changing circumstances. This kind of breakthrough is not just an abstract shift in ideas—it requires a deep reconstruction of collective understanding and institutional practice in the real world.

This means:

  • 1. Embracing the full complexity of history and resisting simplified narratives.History should be analyzed within its specific context, taking into account multiple variables, so that we understand the deeper causes of events rather than reducing them to explanations like “destiny” or “human nature.”
  • 2. Acknowledging civilization’s openness and capacity for choice.Civilization’s path is not predetermined. Its future depends on whether society can tackle complex problems, improve collective understanding, build self-correcting systems, and make rational institutional decisions at key moments.
  • 3. Turning historical lessons into practical governance.Historical tragedies should not be treated as inevitable. By studying them, we can identify the human and systemic factors—such as institutional collapse, power imbalances, and social disorder—and use these insights to design better institutions and strengthen the resilience of a society.

Conclusion

When we look at history along a timeline, it reveals its true form, serving as a guide to how civilizations evolve.

But if we try to understand the present and predict the future by simply applying past patterns, we risk falling into cycles of repetition and the trap of fatalism. Lessons fail to take hold, and civilizations become stuck in self-reinforcing loops.

Progress does not happen automatically with the passage of time, nor is it dictated by some hidden law of history. It depends on a few clear-sighted individuals—those willing to question old paradigms, break free from habitual thinking, and rebuild institutions and social order. They create ruptures in history and drive the renewal of civilization. They are the ones who give true meaning to the lessons of the past.

 

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反文明:愚かな指導者に共通する病理

反文明:愚かな指導者に共通する病理

Kishou · Jul 20, 2025

序論 文明とは、人類が自らの内なる野性や無秩序を乗り越え、共存、尊厳、自由、そして秩序を追い求める営みです。それは決して権力を飾り立て、国威を誇示するための道具ではなく、人類が原始の暴力、蒙昧な儀式、そして強権による支配から抜け出すための唯一の道筋なのです。 その核心には、一人ひとりの生命への尊重、公民の自由の保障、社会の公正の維持、人類運命共同体の追求、そして多様な価値観の尊重があります。 真の文明は、以下の五つの要素を欠かすことができません。 偉大な国家、そして優れた指導者は皆、これを治国の理念としてきました。 しかし残念なことに、歴史を振り返れば、文明の向かう先とは正反対の論理で国を動かし、暴力、支配、私利、そして偽善に浸る、浅慮で冷酷な為政者が後を絶ちません。彼らは文明に背を向け、運命共同体の理念に反し、最終的に国家を大きな災禍へと導くのです。 彼らは国家という名を借りて反文明的な行いをし、民族の大義を盾に非人道的な振る舞いに走ります。支配、殺戮、欺瞞、洗脳、そして抑圧に酔いしれ、ついには国家を国民を縛る枷(かせ)へと変え、民衆を家畜同然に扱い、自らは歴史の罪人として、その名を汚れた歴史の一頁に刻むことになります。 一、愚かな指導者にみられる六つの特徴 反文明的な政権や国家指導者の行動は、驚くほど似通っており、以下の六つの共通点を持っています。 1. 国家を私物化し、人民を奉仕のための道具と見なす。 国家は指導者個人のものとされ、政権、軍隊、法律、資源のすべてがその手に収められます。民衆は、意のままに動かされ、搾取され、あるいは囚われ、管理されるだけの対象となります。 2. 人類文明の発展に逆行し、民衆を敵視する。 彼らは、公民の自由を守り、国民の暮らしを豊かにし、公正な社会を築くことを自らの使命とは考えません。むしろ、人民を便利な道具として、国民を使役の兵、税の源泉、そして思想統制の対象としか見ていないのです。 人類の文明に背を向ける国家の指導者は、本質的に国民全体の敵であり、すべての公民の幸福と利益に反する存在です。これこそ、最も極端で愚かな統治の形と言えるでしょう。 3. 国民全体の幸福を忘れ、個人の利益をむさぼる。 彼らは人々の苦しみに目を向けず、国民全体の幸福や尊厳を顧みません。すべては自らの権力欲、富、そして一族の利益、あるいはごく一部の特権階級の立場を守るためなのです。 このような極端に利己的で他者を顧みない政治は、文明が重んじる価値への乱暴な挑戦であり、国家を衰退させる元凶です。 4. 世界に敵を作り、国内の不正や矛盾から目を逸らさせる。 貧富の格差、税金の不正使用、腐敗の蔓延、不公平な利益分配、偏った資源配分、社会的な抑圧といった国内問題への不満を逸らすため、愚かな指導者は古典的な手法に頼ります。すなわち、世界中に仮想敵を作り「外部の脅威」を煽ることで、民族感情を利用し、支配層が国民の税金を着服し、富を独占してきた悪行を覆い隠すのです。これは、今日でも一部の政権が用いている旧弊な統治論理です。 5. 人々の覚醒を妨げ、市民社会の芽を摘む。 文明の核心とは、公民が自律的に目覚め、個人として自立し、社会に参加することにあります。しかし彼らは言論を封じ、思想を抑圧し、自由を奪い、表現活動を阻害します。知識人、宗教団体、公益組織、メディアに圧力をかけることで、社会全体を無関心で、無気力で、ただ権力に従順なだけの状態に陥らせるのです。 6. 人類運命共同体という視点を拒み、孤立と閉塞を招く。 愚かな指導者は、極端な民族主義や自国第一主義を助長しがちです。世界の文明との対話を拒み、人類の運命が相互に繋がっているという現実から目を背け、自国を思考停止した閉鎖的な社会、いわば情報から隔離された孤島にしようとします。それは最終的に、孤立、衰退、そして自滅へと続く道です。 このようなやり方は、短期的には民衆を操れるかもしれません。しかし長い目で見れば、必ず国家の孤立と民心の離反、社会の分断を招き、やがては混乱と衰亡に至るのです。 二、反文明的統治がもたらす五つの弊害 歴史と現代社会の教訓をまとめると、反文明的な政権には、以下の五つの弊害が共通して見られます。 1. 言論を封じ、思想を統制し、異論を許さず、あらゆる批判を封殺する。自由、尊厳、平等、平和といった普遍的な文明の価値観について、世界と対話することを拒絶する。 2.民族主義、強権主義、国家至上主義、指導者崇拝を国民への精神的な麻薬として利用し、人々の感情を扇動する。彼らが「国家よりも公民が上である」と語ることは決してありません。 3. 法を支配者の都合の良い道具へと変質させ、権力者の特権を黙認する。正義の番人であるべき法が、権力者に奉仕するための鉄の掟と化してしまう。 4. 国民の税金を搾取し、国の資源を独占し、権力者とそれに連なる集団が好き放題に振る舞うのを許し、富が常に特定の層にのみ流れる仕組みを作り上げる。 5. 市民社会を機能不全に陥らせ、独立した知識人、宗教団体、公益団体、自由なメディアを抑圧する。そして「外部の脅威」を口実に、内部の腐敗や不正から人々の目を逸らさせる。 この五つが同時に存在する政権は、間違いなく反文明的であり、愚かな指導者が国を率いている証左です。残念ながら、これらすべてを今なお続けている国家があります。省みることなく愚かな行いを常態化させた結果、徳のある人々は志を阻まれ、国のために力を尽くす道すら閉ざされてしまうのです。 三、反文明政権に訪れる必然の結末 歴史は、文明の道から外れた者が、たとえ一時的に権勢を誇ろうとも、最後には必ず滅びることを繰り返し示してきました。 アッシリア帝国は苛烈な支配によって滅び、秦の始皇帝は思想を弾圧しましたが、その王朝は二代で幕を閉じました。ナチス・ドイツは何百万もの人々の命を奪い、やがて灰燼に帰しました。クメール・ルージュは自国民を虐殺し、歴史に断罪される犯罪者となりました。 非人道的、反文明的な行いをする者は、歴史の流れの中で必ず淘汰されるのです。 その一方で、永きにわたり存続する国家は、いずれも文明的な秩序を尊び、個人の尊厳を守り、思想の自由を認め、法の支配を徹底し、多様な文化を受け入れ、社会が運命を共にするという視点を大切にしています。これこそ、文明国家と優れた指導者が進むべき道なのです。 最後に 最も愚かな国家指導者とは、常に反文明、反人類という道へと突き進む者たちです。彼らは浅はかで、貪欲で、利己的で、冷酷であり、人々が真実に目覚めることを恐れます。だからこそ、民を虐げ、富を奪い、自由を抑圧し、仮想敵を作り出し、人々の幸福を無情にも踏みにじるのです。 しかし、文明の歯車は止まることなく回り続け、偽りはいつか暴かれ、専制は必ず終わりを迎えます。 文明の勝利は、暴力や欺瞞によって得られるものでは決してありません。それは、次のような力によってもたらされるのです。 1. 良識ある人々の目覚め。沈黙を良しとしない人々の粘り強さ。そして、偽りを退け、真実と向き合う勇気を持つ人々の存在。 2. 市民一人ひとりの自覚、制度としての正義、そして人類は運命共同体であるという理念の確立。 […]

反文明,是愚蠢领导者的通病

反文明,是愚蠢领导者的通病

Kishou · Jul 20, 2025

前言 文明,是人类对自身野性与无序的反思,是对共存、尊严、自由与秩序的追求。它从来不是装饰权力、炫耀国威的工具,而是人类摆脱原始暴力、愚昧祭祀与强权统治的唯一道路。 它的核心,是尊重个体生命、保障公民自由、维护社会公正、追求人类社会命运共同体与尊重多元价值。 真正的文明,必须具备五大要素: 凡伟大国家、文明领导者,皆以此为治国纲领。 可令人遗憾的是,历史上偏偏总有愚蠢短视、自私冷酷之徒,执政逻辑与文明方向南辕北辙,迷恋暴力、掌控、私利与伪善。他们背离文明,悖逆命运共同体,最终将国家推向灾难。 他们以国家之名,行反文明之实;以民族大义,行反人类文明之暴行。他们醉心于掌控、屠杀、谎言、洗脑与压制,最终使国家沦为枷锁,使民众沦为牲口,使自己沦为历史的罪人,钉在历史的耻辱柱上。 一、愚蠢领导者的六大特征 任何反文明政权或者国家领导者,其行为模式皆惊人相似,具备以下六大共性: 1. 将国家化为私人物品,人民沦为供役之物。 国家被当成私人工具,政权、军队、法律、资源尽数纳于手中,民众成为随意驱使、收割、监禁、控制的对象。 2. 背离人类文明方向,等同于以人民为敌。 他们不以保障公民自由、改善国民福祉、构建社会公正为己任,反而将人民视为工具,国民视作劳役之兵、税收之源、意识形态的附庸。 凡背离人类文明的国家,其领导者本质上就是在与人民为敌,与全体公民的幸福利益为敌。这是最极端、最愚蠢的统治方式。 3. 抛弃全民幸福,沉溺个人私利。 他们无视百姓疾苦,将全体人民的幸福与尊严抛诸脑后,只为满足自身权欲、财富与世袭利益,乃至少数集团的特权体系。 这种极端自私、罔顾他人的政治生态,是对文明价值最粗暴的践踏,也是国家灭亡的根源。 4. 全球树敌,掩盖国内罪恶与不公。 为了转移国内对贫富差距、纳税被侵吞、腐败横行、利益分配不公、资源分配畸形、社会压制等问题的不满,愚蠢的领导者惯用伎俩:在全球四处树立敌人,制造“外部威胁”,煽动民族情绪,掩盖自己长期利用统治阶层侵占国民纳税、剥削资源、利益私吞的恶行。这正是当今个别政权仍在沿用的旧式统治逻辑。 5. 持续压制觉醒,摧毁公民社会。 文明的核心是公民觉醒、人格独立、社会参与,而他们封锁言论、压制思想、扼杀自由、剥夺表达,打压知识阶层、宗教信仰、公益组织、媒体,致社会沦为犬儒、麻木、唯命是从之众。 6. 拒绝人类社会命运共同体观,制造孤立闭塞。 愚蠢的领导者习惯极端民族主义、国家利己主义盛行,拒绝与世界文明对话,否定全球人类社会命运相连的现实,试图将国家变成一个低智蚂蚁王国,封闭物理与信息孤岛,终致孤立、衰亡、自毁前程。 这种操作短期或可愚弄民众,长期必导致国家孤立、民心尽失、社会撕裂,终致动荡衰亡。 二、反文明统治的五大恶行 总结历史与现实教训,反文明政权皆具五大恶行: 1. 封锁言论,压制思想,扼杀异议,剥夺批判空间。拒绝参与全球文明价值对话,反对自由、尊严、公民平等与世界和平理念 2. 鼓吹民族主义、强权主义、国家至上、领袖崇拜作为国家精神麻醉剂,操纵民众情绪制造精神鸦片。永远不会说,一切公民至上。 3. 将法律沦为统治工具,纵容权贵特权。法律成了魔鬼的利爪与毒绳。将正义法则庸俗化为服务权贵的铁律。 4. 掠夺纳税、侵吞资源,纵容权贵与寡头集团,利益只向上流集团倾斜。 5. 摧毁公民社会,打压独立知识阶层、宗教信仰、公益团体与自由媒体。制造“外部威胁”,转移内部腐烂与罪恶。 这五条,一旦在一国政权并存,便是反文明政权、愚蠢领导者当道的铁证。可惜这一切,今日仍有国家照抄。从来不知悔改,愚蠢成了常客, 结果让有德之士,有志难施,报国无门。 三、反文明政权的必然结局 历史无数次证明,凡与文明背道而驰者,虽一时苟活,终必覆灭。 亚述帝国灭于暴政;秦始皇焚书坑儒,二世而亡;纳粹德国戕害六百万犹太人,终至灰飞烟灭;红色高棉血洗柬埔寨,最终沦为历史罪案。 凡行反人类、反文明者,必在历史洪流中覆亡。 而真正得以长存者,无不重视文明秩序,保护公民人格,尊重思想自由,保障法治独立,接纳多元文化,推崇社会命运共同体观。这才是文明国家与文明领导者应有之道。 结语 最愚蠢的国家领导者,总在反文明、反人类文明方向驰骋。短视、贪婪、自私、冷酷、恐惧觉醒——他们驱赶人民、掠夺纳税、压制自由、树立敌人,残忍践踏公民幸福。 可是,文明的车轮滚滚向前,谎言终将粉碎,专制终会崩塌。 文明胜利,靠的从来不是暴力,不是谎言,而是靠: 1. 有良知者的觉醒,是不肯沉默者的坚持,是敢于拒绝伪善、直面真相的人群。 […]

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