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Concept
1 min read

Reverse Coding: The Way of Subtraction

Building political algorithms by identifying what to remove rather than what to add, following the Taoist principle of returning to simplicity.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi teaches that the usefulness of a cup lies in its emptiness, not its material. Applied to algorithmic politics, this suggests a radical design philosophy: instead of continuously adding features, regulations, and decision-trees to political systems, systematically subtract unnecessary layers. Most governance algorithms accumulate complexity—legacy rules, redundant checks, obsolete regulations—until they become unnavigable. Taoist reverse coding means regularly asking: what can we remove? Which regulations no longer serve? What bureaucratic steps are pure friction? This practice honors the principle that sophisticated systems are often simpler than they appear. By subtracting rather than adding, political algorithms become more responsive, more transparent by virtue of simplicity, and more aligned with actual citizen needs. The paradox is that constraints often limit citizen participation more than freedoms; removing barriers creates more genuine political engagement than adding promotional features.

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