Designing technology systems as closed loops mimicking natural metabolism, where waste becomes input, preventing the linear depletion model of take-make-dispose.
Laozi observes that nature wastes nothing—every organism's output feeds another's input. Linear industrial systems create the illusion of linear time and progress, but they generate waste that nature cannot absorb. Cyclical metabolism means designing technology so that materials, energy, and information flow in loops. Electronics designed for disassembly allow component recovery and material reclamation. Biological materials replace persistent synthetics, degrading back into soil. Industrial heat waste powers adjacent processes. Data generated by sensors feeds optimization algorithms that reduce future consumption. This requires rethinking property rights: materials become temporary loans, not possessions. Producer responsibility ensures companies manage end-of-life. Digital platforms must account for energy costs of data storage and transmission, creating pressure for information efficiency. The shift from ownership to service models—leasing rather than buying—aligns financial incentive with longevity. Nature operates on cyclical time; bacteria decomposing dead matter is as crucial as photosynthesis creating new life. Sustainable technology succeeds when it abandons the linear myth and returns to cycles, where completion generates beginning.
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