Designing tools and platforms that support event-based coordination and relational presence rather than fragmenting attention or imposing linear workflows.
Ubuntu Technology and Temporal Scaffolding addresses the intersection of digital tools and relational time by asking: how can technology support ubuntu values rather than undermine them? Laozi warned against excessive tools corrupting natural simplicity; yet technology itself isn't the problem—only technology that imposes temporal alienation. This concept challenges the assumption that apps must fragment time into notifications, metrics, and interruptions. Instead, it envisions platforms designed around relational events: tools that coordinate gatherings rather than schedule individuals; systems that preserve narrative and context rather than extract data; technologies that extend presence across distance without replacing embodied connection. Examples include platforms for ubuntu circles, ancestral tracking, collective decision-making, and ceremonial scheduling. The framework asks: does this technology extend our relational capacity or diminish our temporal autonomy? Applied thoughtfully, technology becomes a scaffold supporting ubuntu consciousness rather than replacing it. This directly addresses modernity's core tension: how to benefit from technological connection while preserving event-based, relational time.
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