Letting natural processes operate where possible, using technology to enable rather than replace ecological and biological systems.
The highest good is like water, benefiting all things without contention. Laozi advocated minimal intervention, allowing natural processes to unfold. In sustainable technology, this principle opposes the impulse to technologically solve every problem. Sometimes the sustainable choice is removing technology entirely. Wetland restoration for water filtration instead of treatment plants. Natural ventilation and daylighting instead of HVAC and artificial lighting. Soil microorganisms managing nutrient cycling instead of fertilizers. Predator reintroduction instead of pest control technology. This doesn't mean abandoning technology but recognizing its proper role: enabling, measuring, and protecting natural processes, not replacing them. Sensor networks monitoring river health, renewable energy powering restored landscapes, digital tools that help humans cooperate with rather than dominate nature. The Taoist technologist practices restraint, asking in each situation: does this problem need technological solution, or would removing human intervention solve it more elegantly?
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