Returning digital systems and interfaces to essential simplicity before unnecessary features are added, preserving contemplative potential.
The uncarved block (pu) represents undifferentiated wholeness and potential in Taoist philosophy. In Buddhist contemplative computing, this principle advocates for stripping away unnecessary complexity before building features, not after. Most digital platforms accumulate features like sediment, each addition fragmenting attention further. The uncarved block approach questions: what is truly essential? What serves the contemplative mind? Rather than progressively adding customization options, this concept begins with minimal, coherent design that supports present-moment awareness. Default simplicity protects the meditator from drowning in choices that fragment consciousness. Laozi warns that the more laws increase, the more criminals multiply; similarly, each feature increase multiplies ways to distract from contemplative purpose. This framework creates space for authentic practice rather than endless configuration.
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