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Circular Technology: Waste, Repair, and Resource Ethics

Applying Taoist principles of cyclical return and Islamic stewardship to technology's material lifecycle, rejecting linear extraction and disposal models.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Nature operates in cycles where nothing is truly waste; Taoism celebrates this regenerative flow. Islamic tradition designates humans as stewards (khalifah) responsible for sustainable care of creation. Yet technology industries operate on linear extraction—mining rare earths, manufacturing disposable devices, creating toxic e-waste disproportionately harming vulnerable communities. Circular technology ethics demands redesign at every level. Devices should be repairable, upgradeable, and designed for disassembly; manufacturers must take responsibility for material end-of-life rather than externalizing environmental costs; supply chains should be transparent about extraction impacts and worker conditions. This reflects Islamic prohibitions against excess (israf) and principles of justice demanding that environmental harms not fall on the poor while benefits accrue to the wealthy. Implementing circular practices means longer product lifecycles, modular design enabling repairs, take-back programs, and honest accounting of environmental and social costs. Companies embracing this approach discover that sustainability often improves functionality and profitability. The result is technology that flows harmoniously within natural and social systems rather than extracting from them.

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