Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Knowing When to Stop Optimizing

The wisdom of recognizing that optimization has diminishing returns and that 'good enough' often achieves superior real-world outcomes.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching teaches that those who know when to stop never find themselves in trouble—wisdom includes knowing limits. In technology, optimization often becomes pathological, consuming disproportionate resources chasing marginal improvements. An AI workflow optimized to 99% efficiency might require 10x the configuration effort compared to 80% efficiency. The law of diminishing returns operates powerfully: early optimizations yield enormous gains, later ones require exponential effort for minimal benefit. Laozi's teaching reveals the folly of perfection-seeking: resources spent optimizing the final 5% could instead be invested in new capabilities or rest. The practically wise recognize that 'good enough' often surpasses 'optimal' when considering time costs, opportunity costs, and adaptability. A moderately configured system that runs smoothly requires less ongoing maintenance than a perfectly tuned one that breaks with updates. In real-world practice, knowing when to stop optimization—declaring a system 'complete' even if theoretical improvements remain—represents profound wisdom. This allows focus to shift toward what actually matters: meaningful work rather than perpetual refinement. The sage accepts imperfection as the price of efficiency and freedom.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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