2026年4月21日 星期二

靈魂的帳本:為什麼「祀典」是國家最完美的陷阱

 

靈魂的帳本:為什麼「祀典」是國家最完美的陷阱

在大明王朝嚴密的階級制度中,神明的「白名單」不僅僅是床邊故事,而是「祀典」。這份祭祀法令是終極的官僚過濾器。如果一位地方英雄或山林神靈沒能擠進這份官方名冊,祂們就會被貼上「淫祀」的標籤——意即「不正當」或「過度」的崇拜。在明朝政府眼中,名單外的神明基本上就是靈界的非法移民,隨時可能被為了衝績效的地方官員拆掉廟宇。

「祀典」代表了人類傲慢的巔峰:相信國家可以對死後的世界進行邊境管制。統治活人是不夠的,皇帝作為「天子」,要求擁有審核死人的權力。進入「祀典」意味著被「認可」,意味著你的廟宇能得到國家撥款,而你的信徒不會因為煽動叛亂而被捕。它將人類信仰中狂野、混沌的本質,馴化成了禮部豢養的寵物。

這正是權力最憤世嫉俗的體現。大明的精英階層深知百姓總得拜點什麼,與其禁止信仰,不如監管信仰。他們將那些往往因反抗權威而死的民間英雄,重新包裝成「祀典」中「忠義」的神靈。這是終極的歷史「煤氣燈效應」:將一名反叛者轉化為天界的警察。

「祀典」告訴我們,人性對「合法性」的渴望不亞於生存。我們希望我們的神明擁有「執照」,對著領有政府許可證的神靈祈禱讓我們感到更安全。歷史證明,抹殺一場革命最有效的方法不是用刀劍,而是將革命者列入「白名單」,並在雲端給他們一份坐辦公室的差事。


The Ledger of Souls: Why the "Sidian" is the State’s Ultimate Trap

 

The Ledger of Souls: Why the "Sidian" is the State’s Ultimate Trap

In the rigid hierarchy of the Ming Dynasty, the "white list" of divinity wasn't just a collection of bedtime stories—it was the Sidian (祀典). This "Statute of Sacrifices" was the ultimate bureaucratic filter. If a local hero or a mountain spirit didn't make it onto this official register, they were branded as Yinsi (淫祀)—"excessive" or "licentious" cults. In the eyes of the Ming government, an unlisted god was essentially an illegal immigrant in the spiritual realm, liable to have their temple demolished by a local magistrate with a quota to fill.

The Sidian represents the peak of human arrogance: the belief that the state can exercise border control over the afterlife. It wasn't enough to rule the living; the Emperor, acting as the "Son of Heaven," demanded the right to vet the dead. To be on the Sidian was to be "sanctioned." It meant your temple got state funding and your followers weren't arrested for sedition. It turned the wild, chaotic nature of human faith into a domesticated pet of the Ministry of Rites.

This is where the cynicism of power truly shines. The Ming elite knew that people would worship something. Rather than banning faith, they regulated it. They took folk heroes—men who often died resisting authority—and rebranded them as "loyal and righteous" deities within the Sidian. It is the ultimate historical gaslighting: turning a rebel into a celestial policeman.

The Sidian teaches us that human nature craves legitimacy as much as it craves survival. We want our gods to have "licenses." We feel safer praying to a deity with a government-stamped permit. History shows that the most effective way to kill a revolution is not with a sword, but by putting the revolutionaries on a "white list" and giving them a desk job in the clouds.




機器裡的幽靈:為什麼我們不斷「修正」昨天?

 

機器裡的幽靈:為什麼我們不斷「修正」昨天?

歷史不是一座墳墓,而是一個施工現場。在史學的世界裡,我們在「過去的過去」(Past Past)與「現在的過去」(Present Past)之間走鋼索。前者是冷冰冰、已發生的既定事實,後者則是我們為了滿足當下的心理與政治需求,刻意梳妝打扮後的版本。如果說「過去的過去」是一部無聲電影,「現在的過去」就是由一群社運人士與政治家執導、吵鬧且充滿特效的重拍版。

「過去的過去」在本質上是不可回收的。它是人性那未經修飾的混沌——一名羅馬士兵或十九世紀工廠工人的氣味、恐懼與平庸的無聊。它是客觀的,卻也是沉默的。我們觸碰不到它,只能挖掘它的殘骸。

於是,「現在的過去」登場了。這個版本的歷史被用來辯解為何我們的國界是現在的模樣,或是為何我們在道德上優於祖先。這是典型的「現在主義」(Presentism)——我們從過去的碎片中精挑細選,為現在的自己築起一座祭壇。我們用現代民主的眼光去審視古代君王的絕對權力,稱之為「暴君」,卻忘了對當時的臣民而言,君王就像天氣一樣:不可避免且神聖不可侵犯。

危險之處在於,「現在的過去」永遠是一種隱瞞真相的謊言。我們把歷史當作「理解的橋樑」,但往往我們過橋只是為了告訴死人他們錯得多離譜。我們將二十一世紀的敏感神經投影在一個運行著「生存與征服」邏輯的世界裡。這是一場關於道德虛榮心的憤世嫉俗演習。

歸根結底,我們研究歷史並不是為了了解過去,而是為了確認自己的偏見。我們並不想要「過去的過去」那種真相——它太混亂、太冷漠,而且坦白說,太黑暗了。我們想要的是一個「好用的」故事,一個能認同我們的過去。


The Ghost in the Machine: Why We Keep Re-editing Yesterday

 

The Ghost in the Machine: Why We Keep Re-editing Yesterday

History is not a tomb; it’s a construction site. In the world of historiography, we balance on a tightrope between the "Past Past"—the cold, dead reality of what actually occurred—and the "Present Past," which is the version of history we dress up to serve our current psychological and political needs. If the Past Past is a silent film, the Present Past is the noisy, Technicolor remake directed by a committee of activists and politicians.

The Past Past is inherently unretrievable. It is the raw, unvarnished chaos of human nature—the smells, the terror, the mundane boredom of a Roman soldier or a 19th-century factory worker. It is objective, but silent. We can’t touch it; we can only dig for its bones.

Enter the "Present Past." This is the version we use to justify why our borders look the way they do, or why we feel morally superior to our ancestors. It is "Presentism" at its finest—a tool where we cherry-pick the debris of the past to build a pedestal for the present. We look at the absolute power of ancient kings through the lens of modern democracy and call them "tyrants," forgetting that to their subjects, they were simply the weather: inevitable and divine.

The danger, of course, is that the Present Past is always a lie of omission. We use history as a "bridge of understanding," but often we only cross that bridge to tell the dead how wrong they were. We project our 21st-century sensitivities onto a world that operated on the logic of survival and conquest. It is a cynical exercise in moral vanity.

In the end, we don't study history to know the past; we study it to confirm our own biases. We don't want the truth of the Past Past—it's too messy, too indifferent, and frankly, too dark. We want a usable story. We want a past that agrees with us.




將軍的自助餐:2025年軍事強權的質與量之辯

 

將軍的自助餐:2025年軍事強權的質與量之辯

在國際地政學這齣大戲中,「規模」與「實力」鮮少能畫上等號。2025年的數據告訴我們,一個國家的軍隊與其說是盾牌,不如說是一面鏡子,映射出其內心深處的不安全感與歷史包袱。看英國與泰國的對比,簡直就像精品店與百貨倉庫的對話。

英國軍隊正在「縮水」,但每位士兵平均分配到的預算高達44.8萬美元。這是一種薩佛街(Savile Row)式的訂製軍事:昂貴、精準、專為全球博弈而設計。相比之下,泰國在每位士兵身上僅花費1.6萬美元。然而,當英國人專注於核動力的靜默與高空精準打擊時,泰國人似乎更偏好一種「裝飾性」的指揮風格。

最荒謬的諷刺莫過於「將軍差距」。泰國的人口比英國少,卻坐擁約1,700名將軍。在曼谷,你隨便扔塊石頭都能砸到一個滿身勛章的將軍。這是一種典型的「頭重腳輕」結構,平均每200多名士兵就有一位將軍。你不得不懷疑,他們每天是在研擬戰術,還是在排隊照鏡子?從歷史上看,這是軍事官僚體系的特徵——軍銜不再代表戰術天才,而是政治酬庸與安撫精英的籌碼。

英國人也難逃這種虛榮心的指責。不到二十萬的兵力卻配備了近500名將軍,這在倫敦社交圈早已是公開的笑柄。然而,英國人均1,190美元的國防支出反映了一個冷酷的現實:在現代戰爭中,一名無人機操作員或核子技術員的價值,遠勝於一千把刺刀。

歷史教訓告訴我們,臃腫的階級體制往往是崩潰的前兆。儘管泰國承諾在2027年前「瘦身」,但目前看來,英國人擁有的是尖端玩具,而泰國人擁有的是頭銜。如果戰爭是靠肩膀上金線的重量來決定勝負,那泰國無疑已征服了全宇宙。


The General's Buffet: Quality vs. Quantity in the 2025 Arms Race

 

The General's Buffet: Quality vs. Quantity in the 2025 Arms Race

In the grand theater of global geopolitics, size is rarely the same thing as strength. If 2025 has taught us anything, it is that a nation's military is less of a shield and more of a mirror reflecting its deepest insecurities and historical baggage. Take the United Kingdom and Thailand—a comparison that reads like a debate between a high-tech boutique and a sprawling, overcrowded warehouse.

The UK, with its "shrinking" military, spends a staggering $448,000 per soldier. It is the military equivalent of a bespoke Savile Row suit: expensive, meticulously engineered, and designed for global posturing. Meanwhile, Thailand spends a modest $16,000 per head. Yet, where the British focus on nuclear-powered silence and high-altitude precision, the Thais seem to favor a more... decorative approach to command.

The most delicious irony lies in the "General Gap." Thailand, a nation with a smaller total population than the UK, boasts an army of approximately 1,700 generals. In Bangkok, you can’t throw a stone without hitting a man in a star-studded uniform. It is a "top-heavy" structure where there is a general for every 200 or so troops. One wonders if they spend their days strategizing or simply queuing for the mirror. Historically, this is the hallmark of a military-bureaucracy hybrid—a system where high rank is less about tactical genius and more about political patronage and keeping the elite satisfied.

The British are not immune to this vanity; with nearly 500 flag officers for a force that could barely fill a large football stadium, the "too many chiefs" critique is a staple of London dinner parties. However, the UK's per capita spending of $1,190 reflects a grim reality: in modern warfare, a single drone pilot or a nuclear technician is worth more than a thousand bayonets.

History teaches us that bloated hierarchies usually precede a fall. As Thailand promises to "trim the fat" by 2027, the world watches. For now, the British have the toys, but the Thais have the titles. If wars were won by the sheer weight of gold braid on a shoulder pad, Thailand would be the undisputed master of the universe.




2026年4月20日 星期一

東崗後的幽靈:當「國家安全」殺死了人性



東崗後的幽靈:當「國家安全」殺死了人性

歷史總愛把懦弱穿上「戰略必要」的外衣。1970年代末到80年代,越南在流血,無數「船民」把南海變成了水上的墳場。那時的台灣,躲在戒嚴的大牆後面,眼裡沒有鄰居,只有「滲透者」。

這種偏執的最高峰——或者說是人性最深淵——就是1987年的「三七事件」,又稱東崗慘案。想像一下,二十個走投無路、渾身鹽垢的難民,漂向小金門的海岸。他們不是侵略軍,而是破碎世界的殘骸。然而,在當時「不予接納、全部遣返」的僵化政策下,迎接他們的不是救生圈,而是步槍。

軍隊不只是驅逐,而是處決。男人、女人、孩子被射殺後就地掩埋,試圖毀屍滅跡。為什麼?因為在那個憤世嫉俗的年代,難民被簡化成了「穿著濕衣服的共諜」。我們太執著於守護「寶島要塞」,卻忘了看看要塞裡頭還剩多少靈魂。

當香港在蓋難民營、國際社會在討論配額時,台灣的前線只有扣動扳機的冷酷邏輯。這是人性陰暗面的教科書案例:當恐懼被制度化,同情心就變成了安全隱患。我們現在愛自詡為「亞洲之心」,但歷史告訴我們,有很長一段時間,這顆心是被迷彩服和混凝土重重包圍的。

我們重提這段往事,不是為了指責——當事人大多已成枯骨——而是要學會辨別那股以「國家利益」之名掩蓋罪行的惡臭。政治是暫時的,但東崗沙灘上的血跡,在歷史中是永恆的。