Defining sustainable technology by what it doesn't do rather than what it does—constraints that guide design toward essentiality.
Michelangelo described sculpture as releasing the form trapped in marble—subtracting excess to reveal essence. The Tao Te Ching teaches through negation: the Tao that cannot be named, the usefulness of the useless. Applied to sustainable technology, this becomes specification through subtraction. Rather than listing required features, define what the technology must not do: it must not require rare earth minerals; must not connect to extractive supply chains; must not encourage addictive use patterns; must not demand constant software updates; must not monitor users; must not render previous versions unusable. These constraints, paradoxically, guide innovation toward elegance. Designers forced to eliminate unnecessary materials discover better structures. Engineers prohibited from planned obsolescence engineer more durably. Teams banned from dark patterns create honest interfaces. The via negativa doesn't limit possibility; it focuses it. By defining the boundaries of what's acceptable, we sculpt toward technology that truly serves rather than merely sells.
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