How unlimited copies create new scarcity in attention and understanding; printing destroys information scarcity but creates meaning scarcity.
Before printing, knowledge was scarce—books were rare and precious. The printing press seemed to solve scarcity entirely by creating unlimited copies. Yet Laozi understood paradox: the solution to one problem births another. With abundance of text comes scarcity of attention, comprehension, and truth-discernment. This paradox reveals a deeper principle: scarcity cannot be eliminated, only transformed. The printer addressed information scarcity but could not address the scarcity of wisdom, interpretation, or the reader's limited hours. This concept teaches that democratizing access is necessary but insufficient. True democratization requires addressing the new scarcities that emerge: How do readers navigate overwhelming information? How do they develop discernment? Recognition of this paradox prevents false certainty about progress and invites wisdom practices alongside technological distribution—cultivating contemplation, critical thinking, and integration alongside proliferation.
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