**《The eyes of faith can see the future》**
Jack Ma once said: "Most people believe because they see, and a few people see because they believe." This sentence is like a key to open the code to understand the controversy of Bitcoin. When countless people shook their heads at the flashing codes of the blockchain, those who insisted on exploring in the face of doubts are using the power of "belief" to open up new horizons for the times.
Investment is essentially a practice of competing with human nature. When the price of Bitcoin fluctuates like a roller coaster, how many people can resist the urge to chase the rise and sell the fall? The Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi wrote in "The Charcoal Seller" that "I worry about the low price of charcoal and wish the weather is cold", which fully expresses the instinct of seeking profit and avoiding harm in human nature. But those "coin holders" who have persisted for ten years in the blockchain world have interpreted the wisdom of going against the trend with their actions. The investment market always rewards those who can see the future, just as Galileo still insisted that "the earth is indeed turning" in the face of the Inquisition.
Standing on the threshold of the digital age, we must not only maintain awe of innovation, but also protect the light of reason. Bitcoin uses distributed ledgers to reconstruct the trust system, just like the camel caravans on the ancient Silk Road used "half-characters" to cross language barriers to complete transactions. But the mad rush of technology needs the reins of humanity, just like the Northern Song Dynasty court established a "reserve system" for Jiaozi, and Venetian merchants used the notary system to regulate the circulation of bills of exchange. Today, we must not only see the starlight of blockchain in cross-border payments and copyright protection, but also be wary of the reefs in the hype of virtual currencies. As post-00s, we are destined to embrace this era of interweaving virtuality and reality. While some people are still arguing whether Bitcoin is a "scam", the Hangzhou Asian Games has used blockchain technology to issue digital torches, and the Shenzhen Court has used smart contracts to automatically execute judgments. Those imaginations that were initially regarded as absurd will eventually take root in the soil of belief. Just as the navigators in the fifteenth century did not believe that there was an abyss at the end of the sea, today we should not put the shackles of prejudice on innovation. Because every leap of human civilization is based on the starlight of belief, and then there is a distant place to illuminate. Let us use our youth as a torch, to be both questioners of the old system and builders of the new world - this is the most precious answer that the word "believe" has left for the times.