428
LAW
48
For
centuriesthe
Japanese
would
accept
foreignersgraciously,
and
ap—
pearedsusceptible
to
foreign
culturesandinfluences.
joaoRodriguez,
a
Portuguese
priest
whoarrivedin
japan
in 1577 andlivedtherefor
many
years,
wrote,
“Iam
flabbergastedby
the
Japanesewillingness
to
my
andac-
cepteverythingPortuguese.”
Hesaw
japanese
inthe
streets
wearing
Por—
tugueseclothing,
with
rosary
beadsattheirnecksandcrossesattheir
hips.
This
might
seemlikea
weak,
mutable
culture,
but
]apa.n’sadaptability
actuallyprotected
the
country
from
having
analienculture
imposedby
military
invasion.Itseducedthe
Portuguese
andother
Westerners
intobe-
lieving
the
japanese
were
yielding
toa
superior
culturewhen
actually
the
foreign
culture’s
ways
were
merely
afashiontobedonnedanddoffed.
Underthe
surface,Japanese
culturethrived.Hadthe
Japanese
been
rigid
about
foreign
influencesandtriedto
fight
them
off,
theymight
havesuf-
feredthe
injuries
thattheWest
inflicted
onChina.Thatisthe
power
of
i'ormlessness—~—it
gives
the
aggressornothing
toreact
against,nothing
to
hit.
In
evolution,
largeness
isoftenthefirst
step
towardextinction.Whatis
immenseandbloatedhasno
mobility,
butmust
constantly
feeditself.The
unintelligent
areoftenseducedinto
believing
thatsizeconnotes
power,
the
bigger
thebetter.
In4-83
13.0.,
King
XerxesofPersiainvaded
Greece,
believing
hecould
conquer
the
country
inone
easycampaign.
After
all,
hehadthe
largest
army
everassembledforoneinvasion-—thehistorianHerodotusestimated
itatovermorethanfivemillion.ThePersians
planned
tobuilda
bridge
across
the
l-Iellespont
tooverrunGreece
fromthe
land,
whiletheir
equally
immense
navy
would
pin
the Greek
ships
in
harbor,
preventing
their
forcesfrom
escaping
tosea.The
plan
seemed
sure,
yet
asXerxes
prepared
the
invasion,
hisadviserArtabanuswarnedhismasterof
grave
misgivings:
“The
two
mightiestpowers
inthe
world
are
againstyou,”
hesaid.Xerxes
laughed-—whatpowers
couldmatch
his
giganticarmy?
“I
willtell
you
what
they
are,”
answeredArtabanus.“Thelandandthe
sea."
Therewere
nosafe
harbors
largeenough
toreceiveXerxes‘fleet.AndthemorelandthePer-
sians
conquered,
andthe
longer
their
supply
lines
stretched,
themoreru-
inousthecostof
feeding
this
immense
army
would
prove.
Thinking
hisadvisera
coward,
Xerxes
proceeded
withtheinvasion.
YetasArtabanus
predicted,
badweatheratseadecimatedthePersian
fleet,
whichwastoo
large
totakeshelterin
any
harbor.On
land,meanwhile,
the
Persian
armydestroyedeverything
inits
path,
which
only
madeit
impossi—
hieto
feed,
sincethedestructionincluded
crops
andstoresoffood.itwas
alsoan
easy
and
slowqnovingtarget.
TheGreeks
practiced
allkindsofde
ceptive
maneuverstodisorientthePersians.Xerxes’eventualdefeatatthe
handsoftheGreekallieswasanimmensedisaster.The
story
isemblematic
ofallthosewhosacrifice
mobility
forsize:Theflexibleandfleetoffootwill
almost
always
win,
for
they
havemore
strategicoptions.
Themore
gigantic
the
enemy,
theeasieritistoinduce
collapse.
Theneedforformlessnessbecomes
greater
theolderwe
get,
aswe
grow
more
likely
tobecomesetinour
ways
andassumetoo
rigid
aform.