Template:Seventh law of worker entropy: Difference between revisions

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'''The [[JC]]’s [[seventh law of worker entropy]]''' states that ''[[successful inventions do not make things harder]]''. The [[JC]] asserts, without evidence but, he feels, without needing it, for it is an ''[[a priori]]'' truth as certain as arithmetic or [[natural selection]] — there has been no successful innovation in design, commerce or [[technology]] in the history of civilisation itself that made life ''more'' [[tedious]], difficult, frustrating or inconvenient than it already was.
'''The [[JC]]’s [[seventh law of worker entropy]]''' states that ''[[successful inventions do not make things harder]]''. The [[JC]] asserts, without evidence but, he feels, without needing it for it is an ''[[a priori]]'' truth as certain as arithmetic or [[natural selection]] — there has been no successful innovation in design, commerce or [[technology]] in the history of civilisation itself that made life ''more'' [[tedious]], difficult, frustrating or inconvenient than it already was.

Latest revision as of 15:39, 26 August 2020

The JC’s seventh law of worker entropy states that successful inventions do not make things harder. The JC asserts, without evidence but, he feels, without needing it — for it is an a priori truth as certain as arithmetic or natural selection — there has been no successful innovation in design, commerce or technology in the history of civilisation itself that made life more tedious, difficult, frustrating or inconvenient than it already was.