How improving technological efficiency often increases consumption and resource use—a paradoxical trap that Taoist thinking helps us recognize and escape.
Laozi teaches that apparent opposites contain each other: efficiency breeds inefficiency. This paradox, known as Jevons' paradox in sustainability science, describes how making technology more efficient often increases overall consumption because lower costs drive greater use. More fuel-efficient cars encourage more driving; more efficient lighting increases illumination levels. Taoist wisdom recognizes this dynamic as inevitable within linear thinking. Rather than pursuing efficiency alone, sustainable technology must embrace the paradox by building in deliberate constraints, designing for sufficiency rather than optimization, and creating feedback loops that reveal true costs. This means setting absolute limits on resource extraction, designing products for longevity rather than performance gains, and aligning metrics with actual human wellbeing rather than throughput. By acknowledging the paradox rather than fighting it, we escape the treadmill of perpetual improvement and create genuinely sustainable systems.
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