How technological efficiency improvements can paradoxically increase total resource use, revealing the deeper need for restraint and simplicity.
The Taoist sage understands paradox as fundamental to reality: making something more efficient often increases its use, consuming more total resources. This is the Jevons Paradox applied to climate tech. More fuel-efficient cars encourage more driving; cheaper renewable electricity enables greater consumption. Laozi teaches that 'knowing when to stop' is wisdom—the uncarved block of simplicity surpasses elaborate decoration. Modern technology culture assumes efficiency solves everything, yet ignores the paradox that we optimize the wrong things. True climate progress requires questioning the technological impulse itself. Rather than perpetually improving consumption technology, we must examine whether the consumption pattern deserves improvement at all. This demands Wu wei's restraint: the recognition that sometimes the most powerful action is voluntary limitation, allowing natural balance to restore itself without constant technological intervention.
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