Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Empty Space and Technological Sufficiency

The power of absence and restraint—using technology less and choosing sufficiency over endless optimization.

Laozi
Why It Matters

In Taoist aesthetics, empty space is as important as form—it's not blank but pregnant with potential. Applied to technology, this principle suggests that the most powerful design often involves what you don't build. Every additional feature, sensor, or connection adds energy costs, complexity, and failure points. True innovation sometimes means asking: What can we remove? Do we need real-time data or sufficient periodic monitoring? Do we need AI optimization or simple feedback loops? Does every device need internet connectivity or can most be local? This connects to sufficiency economics—designing technology for 'enough' rather than maximum. A smartphone powerful enough for tasks rather than engineered for constant upgrades; buildings insulated well enough rather than engineered for minimal heating; transportation systems adequate for need rather than optimized for growth. This goes against Silicon Valley culture but aligns with climate reality: we don't need more technology, we need better choices about which technology to deploy and which to avoid. Empty space allows systems to be resilient, repairable, and beautiful. It's the hardest design principle because restraint is undervalued in growth-obsessed culture.

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Laozi
Technology & Attention
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