How technology's designed disposability violates natural cycles of decay and regeneration taught in Taoist philosophy.
Laozi teaches that decay is part of the eternal cycle—what dies nourishes new growth in natural systems. But modern technology is engineered for waste: phones designed to fail, batteries sealed shut, planned obsolescence built into software updates. This violates the Tao's cyclical wisdom. In nature, an organism's death returns nutrients to soil; in our system, e-waste becomes toxic landfills in developing nations. The environmental cost is geometric: the resources invested in creating disposable devices, the manufacturing emissions repeated annually, the poisoning of water and soil that cannot reabsorb plastic and heavy metals. Wu wei would suggest designing products to last generations, repairable and upgradable, aligned with natural decomposition and regeneration timelines. This requires abandoning infinite growth economics and embracing sufficiency—keeping what works rather than replacing it with marginally better versions.
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