Aligning product lifecycles with natural time rhythms instead of artificial market cycles.
The Tao Te Ching observes that all things move through seasons of growth, flourishing, decline, and renewal. Sustainable technology must respect this temporal reality rather than impose artificial cycles. Modern capitalism demands upgrades every two years, violating natural product lifecycles that require longer maturation and usefulness. Laozi's understanding of time suggests technology should have genuine seasons: design phase respecting research time, production phase matching material availability, use phase of genuine utility, and return phase enabling renewal. This contrasts sharply with forced obsolescence that truncates lifecycles for profit. In practice, sustainable technologists adopt circular design thinking, planning end-of-life reintegration before manufacturing begins. They recognize that a product designed for fifteen-year lifespans with modular upgradability honors temporal flow better than five generations of disposable devices. By aligning technology lifecycles with natural time rather than market time, we reduce extraction pressure, enable deeper expertise, and allow systems to mature toward genuine sustainability. Time becomes teacher rather than tyrant.
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