Applying ecological metabolism—inputs, growth, decay, regeneration—to technology lifecycles prevents digital waste and treats platforms as living systems requiring rest and renewal.
Natural systems cycle through growth, maturity, decay, and regeneration; nothing exists in permanent acceleration. Industrial capitalism breaks these cycles through planned obsolescence and infinite growth fantasy. Buen Vivir explicitly embraces Pachamama (Mother Earth) and understands human systems as embedded in ecological metabolism. Applied to technology, this means designing platforms with deliberate lifecycles: growth phases for new tools, stabilization when they mature, intentional decomposition and replacement rather than indefinite expansion. Digital infrastructure should mirror agricultural seasons—busy periods of data collection and analysis, fallow periods of consolidation and community reflection, seasonal shutdowns for maintenance and renewal. This prevents burnout in both technology workers and communities dependent on platforms. The concept also addresses e-waste: technology designed to be repaired, upgraded modularly, and genuinely recycled rather than creating landfills of obsolete devices. Laozi teaches that the wise know when to advance and when to retreat. A mature Buen Vivir technology platform includes ceremonies marking transitions between phases, celebrating what's ending as well as what's beginning, honoring the full metabolic cycle rather than pursuing perpetual growth.
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