The principle that unmanaged attention naturally disperses and loses coherence, requiring active ecological design to maintain.
Entropy—the tendency toward disorder—applies directly to attention. Left unmanaged, your focus fragments across competing pulls: notifications, obligations, curiosities. Laozi observed that forcing order against natural tendency creates exhaustion; instead, design systems that slow entropy's progress. This is not about rigid discipline but about creating conditions where attention naturally remains coherent. A cluttered desk increases entropy; a single-purpose workspace reduces it. Algorithmic feeds amplify entropy by design; curated reading lists resist it. The Taoist insight: you cannot permanently force attention into order through willpower alone. Instead, architect your information diet, social environment, and temporal rhythms to make attention's natural state one of focus rather than fragmentation. Acknowledge entropy and design defensively.
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