Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Path of Least Resistance in System Design

Well-designed systems guide users naturally toward correct behavior without rules or force; the path of least resistance becomes the virtuous path.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Water exemplifies Taoist principle: it doesn't argue with rocks but flows around them, and through persistence, shapes them. This teaches system design wisdom. Rather than creating rules and enforcement ('Don't forget to validate emails!'), design systems where the path of least resistance leads to correct behavior. Make valid entries easier than invalid ones. Make backup automatic rather than manual. Position safety features as defaults rather than options users must activate. This approach trusts human nature while accommodating human limitation. People don't deliberately cause problems; they follow paths of least resistance. If you've designed your system so that careless action leads to harm, you've designed badly. If you've arranged it so that thoughtless default behavior prevents problems, you've designed wisely. This requires more initial thought than imposing rules, but generates systems that function smoothly without constant vigilance. Users feel trusted rather than constrained. The system's behavior feels natural rather than forced. This is the Taoist art of hidden guidance: appearing to have no rules while making vice nearly impossible and virtue nearly inevitable.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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