Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Apollo and Artemis: From Greek Myth to NASA’s Return to the Moon

The deeper meaning behind NASA’s moon missions, from humanity’s first visit to its ambition to stay

Names matter. Sometimes they do more than label a project. They tell a story, set a tone, and reveal an ambition. That is certainly true of NASA’s two great lunar programs: Apollo and Artemis. At first glance, they are simply names borrowed from Greek mythology. But looked at more closely, they form a symbolic pair, almost like two chapters in the same human journey. Apollo was the first leap, the bold act of reaching the Moon. Artemis is the return, not merely to visit, but to build a more lasting presence there.1

Artemis is Apollo’s twin sister and the goddess of the Moon.

Apollo (the Sun/light) → first reaches the Moon
Artemis (the Moon itself) → returns to stay

In Greek mythology, Apollo is one of the most important Olympian gods. He is associated with light, reason, music, prophecy, order, and disciplined excellence.2 Over time, he became strongly linked with the Sun, or at least with solar brightness and clarity. Apollo represents the human desire to understand, to measure, to master. His symbolism fits naturally with the spirit of science, engineering, and the kind of precision that made the first Moon landing possible.

Artemis, his twin sister, carries a different but complementary energy. She is the goddess of the Moon, of the hunt, of wilderness, and of protection.3 If Apollo suggests light, order, and directed ambition, Artemis suggests nature, continuity, care, and survival in a harsher world. She is not only a figure of independence, but also of guardianship. In myth, the twins belong together. In NASA’s naming, that relationship becomes beautifully deliberate.

NASA’s Apollo program was the great lunar drama of the 1960s and early 1970s. Its central goal was to land humans on the Moon and return them safely to Earth, a national objective set during the Cold War and achieved with Apollo 11 in July 1969.4 Apollo was about proving that such a thing could be done at all. It was a technical triumph, of course, but it was also a psychological one. Humanity had crossed a threshold. For the first time, our species stood on another world.

Why was the name Apollo chosen? NASA’s historical record does not present the decision as a long philosophical essay, but the symbolism is easy to see. Apollo, associated with light, knowledge, and high achievement, was a fitting emblem for a mission that aimed at the impossible and made it real. The name sounded clear, noble, and forward-looking. It captured the spirit of an age that believed science and disciplined ambition could push back the frontier of the unknown.

Decades later, when NASA designed its new lunar campaign, it did not choose a random modern brand name. It chose Artemis. NASA explicitly describes Artemis as the twin sister of Apollo and the goddess of the Moon, making the connection intentional rather than accidental.5 This is what gives the modern program such poetic force. Apollo, the Sun and light, first reaches the Moon. Artemis, the Moon itself, returns to stay.

That phrase, “to stay,” matters. NASA has repeatedly framed Artemis not simply as another visit, but as part of a broader effort to establish a long-term human presence on and around the Moon, develop new technologies, support scientific discovery, and prepare for future missions to Mars.6 In other words, the ambition has matured. Apollo was the heroic crossing of the threshold. Artemis is the attempt to learn how to live beyond it.

The change in naming also reflects a change in values. The Artemis program has been associated with landing the first woman on the Moon and opening lunar exploration to a new generation of astronauts and international partners.7 That detail is not just a public relations flourish. It marks a cultural shift. Apollo belonged to the age of national prestige and superpower rivalry. Artemis still carries national pride, but it also speaks the language of inclusion, sustainability, partnership, and continuity. The mission is not only to arrive, but to broaden who belongs in the story of exploration.

This is why the two names feel so powerful together. Apollo and Artemis are twins in mythology, and NASA has turned that mythological relationship into a historical arc. Apollo was the age of conquest, the age of firsts, the age of proving. Artemis is the age of return, stewardship, and building. One reached. The other remains. One planted a flag. The other asks what comes after the flag.

Seen this way, NASA’s naming choice becomes more than clever symbolism. It becomes a statement about the evolution of human ambition. At first, exploration is dramatic. It is driven by urgency, rivalry, and the need to demonstrate capability. Later, if civilization is wise, exploration becomes more patient. It shifts from the excitement of arrival to the discipline of inhabiting. The Moon is no longer just a destination. It becomes a teacher.

Final Thought

There is almost a Yin–Yang rhythm in the movement from Apollo to Artemis. Apollo suggests logic, precision, and conquest. Artemis suggests nature, continuity, and protection. One is the sharp line of intention. The other is the wider circle of belonging. In the first age, humanity reached the Moon. In the second, humanity begins to ask how to live with it. That is a more mature question, and perhaps a wiser one.

From a Taoist point of view, true progress is not only the power to go farther. It is also the wisdom to know how to remain in balance with what we touch. The Moon is not merely a trophy in the sky. It is a new field of responsibility. If Apollo was the courage to arrive, Artemis must become the wisdom to stay. And perhaps that is the deeper lesson hidden in these twin names: that human greatness is not measured only by conquest, but by harmony, restraint, and care.


References

1 NASA, “What is Artemis?” explains that Artemis is the twin sister of Apollo in Greek mythology and personifies NASA’s return to the Moon.

2 Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Apollo | Facts, Symbols, Powers, & Myths,” describes Apollo as a major Greek deity associated with music, prophecy, order, and later the sun.

3 Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Artemis | Myths, Symbols, & Meaning,” describes Artemis as the goddess of wild animals, the hunt, vegetation, chastity, and childbirth, and identifies her as Apollo’s twin sister.

4 NASA, “Apollo 11,” states that the primary objective was to complete the national goal of performing a crewed lunar landing and returning safely to Earth; NASA’s Apollo program page explains the broader Apollo goals.

5 NASA, “What is Artemis?” explicitly links the modern lunar program’s name to Artemis, the twin sister of Apollo and goddess of the Moon.

6 NASA, “Moon to Mars | NASA’s Artemis Program,” describes Artemis as part of NASA’s effort to return humans to the Moon, support science and technology development, establish a long-term human presence, and prepare for Mars.

7 NASA materials on Artemis state that the program is intended to land the first woman on the Moon and expand lunar exploration for a new generation of explorers.


Monday, April 6, 2026

From Counting Words to Discovering Meaning

How the evolution of AI is blurring the line between invention and discovery

Keywords: AI evolution, word2vec, transformers, emergence, invention vs discovery, artificial intelligence philosophy

Artificial intelligence is often described as one of humanity’s greatest inventions—an engineering triumph built from code, data and silicon. Yet, as modern systems grow more capable, a quieter and more unsettling question has begun to surface: did we truly invent AI, or did we stumble upon something that was already there, waiting to be uncovered?

The answer lies not in abstract philosophy alone, but in the technical evolution of AI itself. From the earliest language models to today’s transformers, the story of AI is not just one of design, but of discovery—of patterns that emerge beyond our explicit intentions.

The age of counting: Bag-of-Words 1

Early language models treated words with a kind of mechanical innocence. In the bag-of-words approach, a sentence was reduced to a simple count of terms. Order, nuance and meaning were discarded. A sentence became a list; language became arithmetic.

This was clearly an invention. Engineers defined the rules, the representations and the limitations. The system did exactly what it was told—and nothing more. There was no ambiguity, and certainly no surprise.

But this simplicity came at a cost. The model could not distinguish between “the cat chased the dog” and “the dog chased the cat.” It counted, but it did not understand.

From counts to vectors: Word2Vec 2

The next leap introduced something more subtle. With Word2Vec, words were no longer treated as isolated tokens, but as points in a high-dimensional space. Instead of counting words, the model learned relationships between them.

During training, the system adjusted numerical vectors so that words appearing in similar contexts would be positioned closer together. No human labeled dimensions such as “royalty” or “gender.” Yet, after training, remarkable patterns emerged.

One of the most famous examples is almost poetic in its simplicity:

king – man + woman ≈ queen

No engineer explicitly programmed this relationship. It was not written into the code. It arose from the structure of language itself, captured through data and optimization.

At this moment, the narrative begins to shift. We are no longer merely building systems—we are uncovering structures embedded within language. The model becomes less like a tool and more like a lens.

The transformer era: Attention3 and emergence5

The arrival of the transformer4 architecture marked another turning point. With the introduction of attention mechanisms, models gained the ability to weigh relationships between words dynamically, capturing context in a far more sophisticated way.

Unlike earlier models, transformers do not process language sequentially. They examine entire sequences at once, identifying patterns across long distances in text. This allows them to generate coherent paragraphs, summarize documents and even engage in conversation.

Yet, with this power comes opacity. These systems operate as black boxes. We design the architecture and define the training process, but we do not fully understand how specific internal representations lead to specific outputs.

In other words, we build the machine—but we do not fully grasp what it learns.

Invention vs. discovery

This brings us to a growing debate within the AI community. There are, broadly speaking, two perspectives.

The invention view holds that AI is a human creation, no different in principle from a steam engine or a computer chip. Models are the result of engineering decisions, mathematical optimization and computational power. Nothing mystical is involved.

The discovery view, however, suggests something more intriguing. It proposes that intelligence—at least in part—is a structure that exists within data and mathematics. By building neural networks, we are not simply inventing intelligence, but discovering how it manifests.

The behaviour of modern models lends weight to this second perspective. When systems learn relationships that were never explicitly programmed—when they generalize, abstract and recombine ideas—we are witnessing phenomena that feel less like construction and more like revelation.

A hybrid reality

Perhaps the most accurate conclusion lies between the two extremes. AI is, undeniably, an invention in form. Humans design architectures, write code and supply data. But what emerges within these systems often resembles discovery.

We create the conditions under which patterns can appear—but we do not dictate the patterns themselves.

This duality is not entirely new. Scientists did not invent gravity, but they built the tools to understand it. Likewise, AI may be less like a machine we constructed and more like a telescope we aimed inward—toward the structure of language, thought and knowledge.

Final Thought: the quiet shift

The evolution from bag-of-words to Word2Vec to transformers tells a deeper story than technological progress. It reveals a gradual shift in our role—from builders of rigid systems to explorers of emergent ones.

We began by counting words. We ended up uncovering meaning.

And somewhere along that journey, the question changed. Not “What can we make machines do?” but “What have we just found?”

In the end, AI may not be a monument to human control, but a mirror reflecting structures that were always there—waiting patiently, until we learned how to see them.


Footnotes

  1. Bag-of-Words (BoW): A simple technique in natural language processing where a text is represented as a collection of word counts, ignoring grammar and word order. Each document is converted into a vector of frequencies, making it easy to process mathematically, but limited in capturing meaning.
  2. Word2Vec: A neural network-based method that represents words as dense vectors in a continuous space. It learns these representations by predicting surrounding words (context), allowing words with similar meanings to have similar vector positions. This enables semantic relationships such as “king – man + woman ≈ queen.”
  3. Attention Mechanism: A technique that allows a model to focus on different parts of a sentence when processing language. Instead of treating all words equally, the model assigns different levels of importance (weights) to words depending on context, improving understanding of relationships in text.
  4. Transformer: A neural network architecture introduced in 2017 that relies heavily on attention mechanisms. Unlike earlier models, transformers process entire sequences of text in parallel rather than step-by-step, enabling better performance on tasks such as translation, summarization and text generation.
  5. Emergence (in AI): The phenomenon where complex behaviors or capabilities arise from simple rules and large-scale training, without being explicitly programmed. In modern AI systems, abilities such as reasoning or abstraction often appear as emergent properties.

These techniques illustrate how AI evolved from simple counting methods to systems capable of capturing meaning, relationships and context—blurring the boundary between engineered design and discovered structure.


References & Further Reading

  • Geoffrey Hinton (often referred to as “the godfather of AI”) has suggested that neural networks may be revealing something fundamental about how intelligence itself works, rather than merely implementing human-designed rules.
  • Ilya Sutskever, co-founder of OpenAI, has argued that large neural networks do not simply memorize data, but discover underlying representations within it—structures that were not explicitly programmed.
  • David Deutsch, physicist and philosopher, has long maintained that knowledge is not merely constructed, but can be discovered, aligning with a broader view that intelligence may reflect deeper truths about reality.

These perspectives reflect a growing shift in how leading thinkers interpret artificial intelligence—not only as an engineered system, but as a window into the nature of knowledge and cognition itself.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith

How Specialization, Free Markets, and Human Nature Shape Prosperity

A clear and simple explanation of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, including its main ideas, what Smith got right, where he was incomplete, and the powerful principle of division of labor illustrated through a simple story.

Published in 1776, The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith remains one of the most influential books ever written on economics. At its heart, the book tries to answer a simple question: why do some countries become rich while others remain poor? Smith’s answer was both practical and revolutionary. Wealth does not come from gold or treasure, but from the ability of a society to produce goods and services efficiently and to exchange them freely.1

One of Smith’s central ideas is often described as the “invisible hand.” When individuals pursue their own interests—earning a living, improving their lives, building businesses—they unintentionally contribute to the well-being of society. A baker makes bread to earn money, yet in doing so, he feeds the community. Prices, competition, and supply and demand quietly coordinate millions of such actions without the need for central control. This is the foundation of what we call a free market.2

Another key idea is the principle of division of labor, or specialization. Smith observed that people become more productive when they focus on a specific task and repeat it over time. Skills improve, work becomes faster, and output increases. Instead of each person trying to do everything, society benefits when individuals concentrate on what they do best and trade with others.

A simple story illustrates this idea clearly. Imagine Robinson Crusoe living on an island. He is good at hunting with a rifle but not very good at climbing coconut trees. His friend Friday, however, is excellent at climbing and gathering coconuts. If both try to do everything alone, they waste time and energy. But if Robinson hunts while Friday gathers coconuts, and they share the results, both are better off. Their dinner becomes richer not because they worked harder, but because they worked smarter through specialization and cooperation.

The principle of division of labor, or specialization.

This simple example reflects how entire economies function. Farmers grow food, workers build products, engineers design systems, and teachers educate. No one can do everything well, but through specialization and exchange, societies become more productive and prosperous. Smith understood this deeply, and history has largely confirmed his insight.

In many ways, Smith was remarkably accurate. His ideas help explain the rise of wealthy nations such as the United States and countries in Western Europe, where markets, innovation, and entrepreneurship were allowed to develop. He was also correct in recognizing the limits of strict central planning. The economic struggles and eventual collapse of communist systems, such as the Soviet Union, showed how difficult it is for governments to replace the natural coordination of markets.3

At the same time, modern history has shown an interesting evolution of his ideas. Countries like China and Vietnam, once among the poorest in the world, began to grow rapidly after introducing market-oriented reforms. While they did not adopt pure free-market systems, they allowed enough space for productivity, trade, and private initiative to flourish. Their success reinforces Smith’s core idea: wealth grows when human effort is organized through incentives and exchange.4

However, Smith’s vision was not complete. He underestimated the long-term power of monopolies. In theory, markets are competitive, but in reality, large companies can dominate industries, reduce competition, and influence the rules of the game. When this happens, the invisible hand becomes less effective.

He also did not fully address inequality. Markets can create enormous wealth, but they do not guarantee fair distribution. Some individuals and groups benefit far more than others, leading to large gaps between rich and poor. Wealth may grow overall, but not everyone shares equally in that growth.

Globalization is another area where Smith’s ideas need refinement. Free trade allows countries to specialize and increases efficiency, but it can also disrupt local industries and communities. Jobs move, industries decline, and societies must adapt. What looks efficient at a global level can feel painful at a local level.

In this sense, Adam Smith gave us a powerful engine for creating wealth, but history has shown that the system also needs balance. Markets require rules, competition needs protection, and societies must care about fairness as well as efficiency.

Final Thought

As we reflect on these ideas, there is a quiet wisdom that goes beyond economics. Like the balance of Yin and Yang, a healthy society requires both freedom and structure, both growth and restraint. Too much control suffocates progress, but too little guidance can lead to imbalance. True prosperity is not only about producing more, but about creating a system where wealth, responsibility, and harmony can exist together. In that balance, we may find not only richer nations, but wiser ones.


Footnotes:

1 Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776.

2 The concept of the “invisible hand” describes how individual self-interest can lead to collective benefits in a market system.

3 The Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 after decades of economic inefficiency and central planning challenges.

4 China introduced major economic reforms in 1978; Vietnam followed with Đổi Mới reforms in 1986, both leading to rapid economic growth.

The Real Adam Smith: Ideas That Changed the World



Thursday, March 26, 2026

AI: Invention or Discovery? A Quiet Revelation from Mathematics to Machines

A philosophical exploration of whether artificial intelligence is truly an invention or a discovery. From Maxwell’s equations to modern LLMs, this essay examines how AI may reveal patterns that have always existed in nature — echoing deeper questions about mathematics, intelligence, and the Tao.


Figure: Across oceans and equations, humanity does not create truth — it learns to see it.

There are moments in human history when understanding does not arrive as a gradual improvement, but as a quiet revelation — as if a veil is lifted, and something that has always been there suddenly becomes visible.

One of these moments occurred in the 19th century, with the work of James Clerk Maxwell.

When Equations Spoke Before Experiments

Maxwell wrote down a set of equations describing electricity and magnetism.

At first, they seemed like a unification of known forces — elegant, but not shocking.

Yet hidden inside these equations was something extraordinary.

They predicted waves traveling through space at a constant speed.
When he calculated that speed, it matched the known speed of light.


From pure mathematics, he arrived at a stunning conclusion:

Light is an electromagnetic wave.


This was not first seen through a telescope or measured in a lab.
It was revealed through structure — through mathematics itself.

Only later did experiments confirm what the equations had already shown.


A Familiar Pattern: When Discovery Precedes Observation

History offers another, simpler analogy.

When Christopher Columbus reached the American continent, he did not invent it.

The land was already there — vast, real, and waiting.

What he did was not creation, but discovery.


The continent existed long before it was known.


From Continents to Intelligence

Now consider artificial intelligence.

We build systems like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude.


At their core, they perform a simple task:

Predict the next token based on context.


And yet, from this simple mechanism emerges something remarkable:

  • Coherent language

  • Insightful explanations

  • Creative expression


It feels as if intelligence appears.

But did we invent it?

Or did we, like Columbus, arrive at something that was already there?


The Deeper Question

Just as Maxwell did not invent light,
and Columbus did not invent a continent,


we may ask:

Did we invent intelligence in machines…

or did we discover a pathway to it?


Language already contains structure.
Meaning already emerges from patterns.
Learning already exists as a principle in nature.

What we built are the ships — the systems — that allow us to reach these shores.


Two Ways of Seeing

AI as invention:

  • We design architectures

  • We engineer systems

  • We construct machines


AI as discovery:

  • We uncover patterns in language

  • We reveal structures of learning

  • We expose properties of intelligence


A Taoist Reflection

From a Taoist perspective, the distinction softens.

The Dao does not create with intention.
It allows things to arise.


In this view:

  • The patterns were always present

  • The potential was always there

  • We simply arrived at the moment when we could see it


AI becomes not an artificial creation,
but a natural unfolding — a continuation of the same patterns that shape language, thought, and reality.


The Bridge

Perhaps the truth lies between invention and discovery.

We invent tools.
But what the tools reveal… is discovered.


Just as a ship does not create a continent,
but makes it reachable,


AI does not create intelligence —
it makes it visible.


Final Thought

In the quiet flow of things, nothing is forced.

The river does not invent its path.
It follows what is already there.


Perhaps intelligence is the same.

We build machines, we write code, we design systems —
yet what emerges feels less like creation, and more like recognition.

Not something new,
but something seen for the first time.


In this way, AI may not stand apart from nature,
but move with it.

And in that movement, we are reminded:

To understand the world is not always to build more,
but to see more clearly what has always been. 🌿


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

References (Selected Inspirations)

Maxwell (Electromagnetism), Dirac (Quantum Theory), Turing (Machine Intelligence),

Tao Te Ching, and modern developments in Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning.








Monday, March 16, 2026

The Rise and Fall of Empires

Great powers rarely imagine that their dominance will fade. At the height of their influence, empires appear permanent, their institutions stable and their military strength unchallengeable. 

Yet history repeatedly tells a different story. Rome once ruled the Mediterranean world, Spain commanded the wealth of the Americas, and Britain governed a quarter of the planet. Each power believed it stood at the center of history. Yet each eventually yielded to new forces rising beyond the horizon. 

Today, as the United States navigates a rapidly changing global order and the rise of China, the echoes of earlier transitions grow difficult to ignore. To understand the present moment, we must first revisit the long rhythm of history — the rise and fall of empires.

The British Empire and the Changing Balance of Power

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the British Empire stood at the peak of global power. By the late nineteenth century, Britain controlled roughly one-quarter of the world’s GDP and nearly a quarter of the global population. London was the financial capital of the world, and the Royal Navy dominated the seas.

Yet beneath this impressive position, important changes were already taking place.

Maintaining such a vast empire required constant attention. Britain frequently had to respond to instability across its territories. In 1920, for example, a major rebellion in Iraq required Britain to deploy more than 100,000 British and Indian troops to suppress the uprising. The campaign cost tens of millions of pounds — roughly equivalent to Britain’s entire national education budget at the time. Meanwhile, British forces were also engaged in maintaining control in Sudan and Somalia, confronting local resistance movements and managing fragile colonial administrations.

These interventions appeared necessary in the moment. Yet they consumed enormous political energy, military resources, and financial capital.

While Britain was busy managing crises across its empire, other powers were quietly transforming their economies. The United States was rapidly building the most advanced industrial economy in the world. Across the Atlantic, Germany rebuilt its industrial base and developed modern mechanized military capabilities despite the devastation of World War I.

Britain remained powerful, but its attention was divided between maintaining global control and adapting to a changing technological world.

Over time, the balance of power shifted.

Earlier Empires Followed the Same Pattern

The British experience was not unique. History shows that many empires follow a similar trajectory.

The Roman Empire, at its height, unified the Mediterranean world through military strength, engineering, and law. Yet over centuries it became overstretched, facing constant military pressure along distant borders while struggling with internal political and economic challenges.

The Spanish Empire dominated the sixteenth century after discovering vast reserves of silver and gold in the Americas. Yet the wealth from its colonies encouraged excessive military spending across Europe. Inflation rose, industries weakened, and Spain gradually lost its dominant position.

In each case, the pattern followed a familiar rhythm:

  1. Rapid expansion and rising power

  2. Global dominance and confidence

  3. Increasing commitments across distant regions

  4. The rise of new economic or technological rivals

  5. Gradual decline rather than sudden collapse

Empires rarely fall because they are suddenly defeated by foreign armies. More often, they decline because the world around them changes.

The Present: The United States and the Rise of China

Today, the United States occupies a global position that in many ways resembles that of Britain a century ago.

The American economy produces about one-quarter of the world’s GDP, roughly comparable to Britain’s share during its imperial peak. The U.S. dollar serves as the dominant global reserve currency, and American military alliances extend across Europe, Asia, and the Pacific.

Like Britain in its era, the United States acts as a central pillar of the international system.

But global leadership also brings responsibilities and distractions.

Over the past two decades, the United States has spent significant military, political, and financial resources responding to conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, and other parts of the Middle East. These engagements were often driven by urgent political and security concerns, yet they have required enormous attention from American policymakers.

The situation bears a striking resemblance to Britain’s earlier experience managing crises across its empire.

While the United States has been deeply involved in geopolitical conflicts, another power has been steadily transforming its economic and technological capabilities.

Over the past forty years, China has experienced one of the fastest economic expansions in human history. Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted out of poverty. China has become the world’s second-largest economy and the largest manufacturing power.

Today, China is investing heavily in the technologies that will shape the future global economy:

• artificial intelligence
• renewable energy
• electric vehicles and batteries
• robotics and advanced manufacturing
• quantum computing and telecommunications

In other words, while one power manages the responsibilities of global leadership, another is focusing intensely on long-term economic transformation.

History does not repeat itself exactly.

But sometimes, it rhymes.

“The Great Economic Gravity Shift.”

Europe  →  Atlantic World  →  United States  →  Pacific / Asia

 1800        1900             1950–2000        2025–2050

Figure: The shifting center of global economic power from Europe (1800) to the Asia-Pacific region (2050 projection). As China rises and Asia expands economically, the gravitational center of global growth is moving eastward.

What Vietnam Can Learn from This Moment

For countries like Vietnam, these shifts in global power are not merely historical curiosities. They create both challenges and opportunities.

The rise of China can be compared to a tectonic movement beneath the geopolitical landscape. When tectonic plates shift beneath the earth’s surface, the entire region around them changes. In a similar way, China’s rapid economic growth is reshaping supply chains, trade networks, and technological competition throughout Asia.

Vietnam sits directly within this evolving landscape.

In recent years, many global companies have begun diversifying their supply chains, seeking alternatives to manufacturing concentrated in a single country. Vietnam has benefited from this trend, becoming one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing manufacturing centers.

But the deeper lesson from history is clear.

Long-term prosperity does not come from low-cost manufacturing alone. Nations that succeed in the long run are those that invest continuously in education, technological capability, institutional quality, and innovation.

Just as the United States quietly built its industrial strength during Britain’s imperial era, Vietnam today has an opportunity to strengthen its economic foundations while larger powers compete on the global stage.

History sometimes offers small nations a rare window of opportunity.

The challenge is recognizing it — and acting wisely.

A Taoist Reflection on the Rise and Fall of Powers

From the perspective of Taoist philosophy, the rise and fall of great powers reflects the eternal rhythm of Yin and Yang.

Periods of expansion and dominance represent the Yang phase — ambition, energy, and outward force. Yet within every peak of power lies the seed of its opposite. Overextension, rigidity, and complacency gradually give rise to the Yin phase — decline, adjustment, and renewal.

History therefore moves not in straight lines, but in cycles.

Rome, Spain, Britain, and perhaps one day even the present global order have all followed this rhythm.

For wise nations, the goal is not to dominate the world, but to remain adaptable and balanced, like water flowing around obstacles.

As Lao Tzu wrote in the Tao Te Ching:

“The soft overcomes the hard,
and the flexible overcomes the rigid.”

For nations navigating the shifting currents of global power, the lesson is simple:

Those who remain adaptable, patient, and committed to learning may find prosperity even as the great tides of history rise and fall around them.

References

Fareed Zakaria. Why America Keeps Getting Bogged Down in the Middle East – Fareed’s Take.

Kennedy, Paul. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers.

Acemoglu & Robinson. Why Nations Fail.

Ray Dalio. The Changing World Order.


Wednesday, March 4, 2026

AI and Consciousness

Technology, Mind, and the Question of the Soul

Artificial intelligence has progressed from a speculative scientific idea to a technology that now writes essays, generates images, diagnoses diseases, and even defeats world champions in complex games. Yet as AI grows more capable, an ancient philosophical question returns with new urgency: Can machines think, and could they ever become conscious? Understanding this question requires looking briefly at how AI developed, what neural networks actually do, and how this technology reflects deeper questions about the nature of the human mind. 


A visual metaphor for the evolving relationship between biological consciousness and digital neural networks.

 A Short History of Artificial Intelligence 

The modern field of artificial intelligence began in the 1950s when scientists first asked whether computers could simulate human reasoning. Early researchers pursued two very different approaches. The first approach was logic-based reasoning. In this model, intelligence was treated as a system of formal rules, much like mathematics. Researchers attempted to encode knowledge explicitly: if the computer knew enough logical rules, it could solve problems step by step, much like a mathematician proving a theorem. Early AI programs built in this tradition attempted to prove logical statements or solve puzzles by following chains of symbolic reasoning.¹ 

The second approach was inspired not by mathematics but by biology. Some scientists believed that intelligence emerged from the structure of the brain itself. Instead of programming rules explicitly, they attempted to build simplified models of neural networks, systems loosely inspired by the neurons in the human brain.² For decades the two approaches competed. Logic-based AI produced some impressive demonstrations but struggled with complex real-world problems. Neural networks, meanwhile, improved slowly as computing power increased. By the early 21st century, advances in data, computing power, and learning algorithms allowed neural networks to surpass earlier methods. Today, modern AI systems — including large language models — are largely built on neural-network architectures.³ 

 How Neural Networks Learn 

Artificial neural networks attempt to mimic, in a simplified way, how neurons interact in the brain. A neural network is composed of many interconnected nodes organized in layers. Information flows through the network in a process called forward propagation

In forward propagation, an input — such as an image, a sentence, or a question — passes through layers of neurons. Each neuron processes the signal and passes the result to the next layer until the system produces an output. For example, a network may receive a photograph and output the label “cat.”⁴ 

However, learning occurs through another process known as backpropagation. When the system produces an incorrect answer, the network calculates the difference between its prediction and the correct result. This error signal is then propagated backward through the network, adjusting the weights of connections between neurons. Over millions or billions of examples, the system gradually improves its predictions.⁵ 

Through this process, neural networks learn patterns from vast collections of data. Large language models, for example, are trained on enormous amounts of text written by humans. From this data they learn statistical relationships between words, ideas, and structures of language. This allows them to generate explanations, summaries, and conversations that often appear remarkably intelligent. 

The Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence 

Like many powerful technologies, AI carries both promise and danger. 

On the positive side, AI has the potential to transform many areas of human life. It can assist doctors in detecting diseases earlier, help scientists design new medicines, optimize transportation systems, and improve the efficiency of energy use. AI can also support education by acting as a learning assistant that helps students explore knowledge more interactively. In this sense, AI may become one of the most powerful tools ever created for extending human knowledge and creativity

Yet the same technology can also be used in harmful ways. AI systems can be applied to autonomous weapons, large-scale surveillance, misinformation campaigns, and cyber warfare. As history repeatedly shows, technologies that expand human power can be used both to build and to destroy. 

A knife can prepare food in the kitchen, but it can also become a weapon. Nuclear technology can generate electricity, but it can also create devastating bombs. AI belongs to this same category of dual-use technologies. The impact of AI will depend less on the technology itself than on how humanity chooses to use it

 AI, Language, and the Question of Consciousness 

The rise of modern AI also raises a deeper philosophical question. Humans often think using language. Our inner thoughts frequently appear as silent sentences inside our minds: questions, arguments, explanations, and reflections. 

Large language models have become remarkably skilled at using language. They can reason through problems, summarize ideas, and generate coherent arguments. This leads to a natural question: if human thinking is closely connected to language, and AI becomes highly capable in language, could AI eventually think as humans do? 

Some researchers believe that intelligence may ultimately be a form of complex pattern processing. In this view, the human brain and artificial neural networks may share a similar principle: both are systems that learn patterns from experience and use them to generate predictions or decisions. 

However, intelligence is not the same as consciousness. Consciousness involves subjective experience — the feeling of being aware. We still do not fully understand how consciousness arises even in the human brain. Neuroscience has mapped many neural processes, yet the nature of awareness itself remains one of science’s greatest mysteries. 

This leads to a provocative question: if the brain is essentially a biological neural network, and artificial neural networks become increasingly sophisticated, could consciousness eventually emerge in artificial systems as well? Or is consciousness tied to biological processes that machines cannot replicate? 

Another possibility is that what we call consciousness is simply the result of extremely complex neural interactions. If that is true, then the difference between human intelligence and machine intelligence might be smaller than we once believed. 
 
These questions remain open. AI today demonstrates remarkable intelligence-like behavior, but there is no evidence that it possesses awareness or inner experience. The debate about machine consciousness is likely to continue for many years. 

 A Taoist Reflection on Intelligence 

From the perspective of Eastern philosophy, especially Taoism, the rise of artificial intelligence may not be something entirely unprecedented. The Taoist view of the world emphasizes balance between opposing forces, often expressed as Yin and Yang. 

Every powerful force contains both creative and destructive potential. Fire warms homes and cooks food, yet it can also burn forests and cities. Steel builds bridges but also forms swords. Intelligence itself can heal or harm. 

Artificial intelligence may simply be another expression of this universal balance. It reflects human creativity, but it also amplifies human responsibility. 

Perhaps the most important question is not whether machines will someday think like us, but whether we will learn to guide our inventions with wisdom. Technology is a mirror of the civilization that creates it.

If humanity cultivates knowledge with humility, power with restraint, and innovation with compassion, AI may become one of the greatest tools for human progress. If we fail to maintain balance, the same technology could deepen conflict and division. 

In the quiet language of Taoist philosophy, the lesson is simple: power must be guided by harmony. Artificial intelligence, like any tool, will ultimately reflect the character of those who wield it. 

 Footnotes

1. Early symbolic AI research emerged in the 1950s with programs such as the Logic Theorist and General Problem Solver. 
2. Artificial neural networks were inspired by simplified models of biological neurons proposed in early computational neuroscience. 
3. Modern AI breakthroughs since the 2010s have largely relied on deep learning neural networks trained on large datasets. 
4. Forward propagation refers to the process where information flows from input to output through layers of a neural network.
5. Backpropagation is the learning algorithm that adjusts network weights based on prediction errors.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Section II: The Norway Case — Governing Sudden Wealth Without Losing Balance

The Norway case shows how disciplined governance turned oil wealth into lasting prosperity, offering vital lessons for Vietnam’s long-term development.

To understand how industrial policy succeeds in practice, it is useful to study moments of sudden opportunity. Norway offers a rare example of a country that discovered extraordinary wealth and responded not with urgency, but with restraint.


Norway turned sudden oil wealth into lasting national strength through restraint, institutions, and long-term governance — a contrast to Venezuela’s oil trap, and a lesson for Vietnam.

Before oil, Norway was a small, open economy built on shipping, fishing, hydropower, and manufacturing. When large petroleum discoveries were confirmed in the North Sea at the end of the 1960s, the country effectively won a national jackpot. Yet Norwegian leaders understood early that the greatest danger was not scarcity, but excess. The real challenge would not be extracting oil, but governing wealth.

From the outset, Norway established a simple but decisive principle: 

Petroleum resources belonged to the nation as a whole.

This consensus was formed early, before large revenues arrived and before political habits hardened. Rules were written before pressure appeared. That sequencing proved decisive.

Rather than allowing oil income to flow directly into the domestic economy, Norway designed institutions to slow money down. The state imposed high but predictable taxes and retained direct ownership stakes in petroleum fields, ensuring national value capture while leaving day-to-day operations to professional firms. Over time, this model took shape through commercially run entities such as Equinor, combined with clear regulatory oversight and financial discipline.

The most important decision, however, was what not to do. Oil revenue was not treated as ordinary income. Instead, it was saved abroad, invested globally, and introduced into the domestic economy only gradually through strict fiscal rules. This prevented overheating, protected non-oil industries, and ensured that future generations would benefit from a finite resource. Norway chose patience over popularity.

Equally important was the separation of ownership from emotion. The state owned strategically, but governed calmly. Politicians set long-term boundaries rather than issuing operational instructions. Professional management, transparency, and accountability were not slogans, but structural requirements. This insulation reduced corruption, limited short-termism, and forced competence.

Venezuela’s Oil Trap

The contrast with oil-rich countries such as Venezuela is instructive. There, oil income became a shortcut to political power. Spending accelerated, institutions weakened, and savings mechanisms were repeatedly overridden. When prices fell, buffers were gone. Wealth arrived, but discipline did not.

Lessons for Vietnam’s long-term development.

For Vietnam, the lesson from Norway is not about oil. It is about timing, restraint, and institutional design. Vietnam’s future windfalls may come from foreign direct investment, land-value capture, strategic infrastructure, energy transition, or industrial upgrading. The source matters less than the response.

Norway shows the importance of acting early, before money reshapes incentives. It shows the value of separating state ownership from political impulse. And it shows that extraordinary income should be treated as temporary leverage, not permanent entitlement. Save first. Invest carefully. Spend slowly.

In Taoist terms, Norway practiced wu wei in economic governance: acting without forcing, governing without overreaching, allowing well-designed systems to function without constant intervention.¹ Wealth was guided, not chased.

Final Thought

History does not warn loudly; it teaches quietly. Norway’s experience shows that sudden wealth is neither a blessing nor a curse, but a test of judgment. By choosing restraint over speed and institutions over impulse, Norway allowed time to work in its favor. The present often urges nations to spend, expand, and celebrate too quickly. Yet lasting prosperity comes from balance, responsibility, and patience. To understand the challenges Vietnam faces today, it must first learn how others governed abundance before it governed them.


Footnotes

¹ Wu wei (无为) is a core concept in Taoist philosophy, most closely associated with the Tao Te Ching. It does not mean “doing nothing,” but non-forcing or effortless action — setting wise structures early and allowing systems to operate in harmony rather than through constant control.

References

This article draws on publicly available sources and established literature on petroleum governance and economic development, including 

  • Norwegian government publications on oil policy, fiscal rules, and sovereign wealth management; 
  • Documentation on Equinor’s governance model; 
  • Comparative studies on the resource curse; 
  • Historical analyses of oil-rich economies such as Venezuela; 
  • and broader academic and policy research on industrial policy, long-term growth, and demographic transition. 
All synthesis and conclusions reflect the author’s own interpretation, informed by historical comparison.

Authorship

This article is written by Dave Huynh, as part of an ongoing series on economic development and Vietnam’s future growth path. It is developed in collaboration with Amanda, an AI research and writing partner, who supports analysis, structure, and language refinement. All interpretations and conclusions remain the author’s own.

Series Note
This article is part of a series on historical development case studies, drawn as lessons for Vietnam’s future. Read the previous and next sections below:

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