In the highest antiquity, (the people) did not know that there were (their rulers). In the next age they loved them and praised them. In the next they feared them; in the next they despised them. Thus it was that when faith (in the Tao) was deficient (in the rulers) a want of faith in them ensued (in the people). How irresolute did those (earliest rulers) appear, showing (by their reticence) the importance which they set upon their words! Their work was done and their undertakings were successful, while the people all said, 'We are as we are, of ourselves!'
This chapter traces the decline of human trust through history: when leaders embody the Tao silently and naturally, people don't even notice their governance—they simply flourish as themselves. But the moment leaders lose faith in the Tao and begin to perform, manipulate, or demand belief, the people's trust erodes in direct proportion. The teaching is that authentic influence requires invisibility; the best leadership plants seeds and steps back.
We live in an age of constant visibility and demanded belief. Every institution, leader, and voice clamors to be seen, to be praised, to be proven right. We are drowning in the noise of those who have lost faith in anything larger than their own necessity—and so our collective faith drains away too. The chapter whispers that our current hunger, our suspicion, our exhaustion with authority is not a problem to be solved by louder voices or better marketing, but a symptom of the Tao withdrawing from the places where it should have been quietly at work all along. We mistake leadership for visibility and trust for agreement.
Today, notice where you are trying to convince someone of your worth or rightness. Notice the effort. Then notice what becomes possible if you simply do what needs doing and let go of being seen for it. This is how real influence moves—not through force or performance, but through the integrity of your actions speaking for themselves.