Revealing what remains unseen in technology's full lifecycle—embodied emissions, labor conditions, and ecological impacts invisible in price.
The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao. Similarly, the sustainability metrics we measure are not true sustainability. Every technology hides shadow costs: cobalt mining for batteries, water consumed in chip fabrication, worker exploitation in assembly, electronic waste in disposal. Market prices make these invisible because they're externalized. Laozi's teaching about what remains unspoken applies here—what we don't measure shapes us most profoundly. Sustainable technology demands naming the shadow Tao. Full lifecycle assessments revealing true environmental costs. Supply chain transparency exposing labor conditions. Impact accounting that prices carbon, water, and toxicity. When these shadow costs surface, we design differently. We might choose durable devices over efficient-but-disposable ones. We might demand fair wages in manufacturing, reducing profit but increasing integrity. The sustainable technologist must become comfortable with uncomfortable visibility, making the hidden manifest so wisdom can guide choices.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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