Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

Simplifying can be good, but simplification is not itself a virtue. What happens when you keep simplifying, and keep simplifying, and keep simplifying? All the logos start to look exactly the same. The personality disappears. Everything starts sounding the same. You see this in bookstores where you'll pick up...

51,613 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

David Perell's profile picture
David Perell1 year ago

I grew up in San Francisco, walking with my family by the Golden Gate Bridge. I still remember the thick and iconic chain railing that gave the place a sense of distinctiveness. Now the chains are gone, and they've been replaced by a soulless metal railing that's colder than a hospital waiting room. I'm sure some bureaucrat somewhere justified it with a tidy spreadsheet, but they stripped away a little piece of San Francisco's soul in the process. This is how a culture loses its charm: slowly, quietly... one small decision at a time.

David Perell's profile picture
David Perell1 year ago

Ok, the poet Dana Gioia explained the problem better than I ever could. This rips: "The failure of the public sector in this nation is embodied in thousands of ugly buildings and public spaces. These places have been built practically. They are practical and functional in every respect except in practice, since they communicate to the average person that the citizen is just a number in a game of cost efficiency and crowd control. The experience that Americans have with walking up the steps of the Lincoln Memorial is the experience of beauty, the embodiment of our political vision of the beauty of democracy, expressed in great architecture, great sculpture, great landscaping, and great language, carved calligraphically in the very walls of the memorial. Just look at a Depression-era post office with marble floors, carved wooden counters, brass fixtures and often an original mural. This was a vision of a beautiful society to which any citizen who entered could participate in. Today the post office is all vinyl and plexiglass. It offers no vision but expediency. We are not citizens, but customers in a cut rate 99 cent store vision of democracy. No wonder the public doesn't believe in the government. The government seems not to believe in them as alert, intelligent, sensory human beings." @DanaGioiaPoet

pharout73's profile picture
pharout731 year ago

Kinda like Cars.... 6-7basic styles... 3-4 colors - white, black, silver and metallic silver /blue or green mix. Loss of art, beauty, individuality

TN's profile picture
TN1 year ago

Simplifying is a means to an end. But wisdom lives in nuance: the pause before answering, the shadow in the light. A forest isn’t "just trees"; a mind isn’t "just synapses." Depth demands we hold multiple truths at once—to honor reality’s layers

Jacob Hayward's profile picture
Jacob Hayward1 year ago

I truly believe that AI will actually help humans reclaim the art of storytelling and we will see a great reversal from the current blandness.

Noah Komnick's profile picture
Noah Komnick1 year ago

Society needs wabi-sabi.

Prashanth Manohar's profile picture
Prashanth Manohar1 year ago

Really well said. Simplicity should highlight what matters , not erase identity. When everything looks the same, minimalism stops being intentional and just becomes default. Without contrast or texture, we lose the very thing that makes design, writing, or products memorable.

LV426's profile picture
LV4261 year ago

Simple things for simple minds.

Jamie Kuryla's profile picture
Jamie Kuryla1 year ago

Proctor and Gamble : P&G, Federal Express : FedEx, and so many other companies that have thrown away sometimes 50+ years of advertising

Raymond Darling's profile picture
Raymond Darling1 year ago

That's the whole issue with industrialization, and now its masterpiece: Artificial Intelligence. It's the end of culture and of communication for its own sake. It all ends up normalized by the machine of productivity.

Related Videos

Sometimes the thing that hurts you, isn’t the moment itself, it’s the fact that you keep reliving it. Not once. Not twice. But in patterns that look different outside and feel identical inside. You start wondering why it keeps happening. Why the same fears return. Why the same version of you shows up even when you swore you were done with him. Most people think life moves in a straight line. But the Vishnu Purana says something completely different: “Krita, Treta, Dvapara and Kali, these ages turn like a wheel.” A wheel. Not a timeline. A rotation that keeps circling back until something in you changes. Centuries later, Nietzsche said almost the same thing, his idea of “eternal recurrence.” If you had to live this day again and again, would you be proud of it, or terrified that you’re still choosing the same life? And even modern physics keeps stumbling toward the same shape, cyclic universe models, Big Bangs followed by cosmic “bounces,” universe after universe rising from the ashes of the last. Once you see this, your own life starts making a different kind of sense. You stop blaming fate and start noticing your habits. You stop praying for a new life while living the old one on autopilot. Because you’re not trapped in a cycle. You’re participating in one. So ask yourself, What keeps returning because you haven’t faced it yet? What pattern keeps knocking like a teacher you ignore? What moment repeats because you haven’t shown up differently? In a universe where time moves in circles, even the smallest choice isn’t small. It becomes a pattern. A future. A repetition, or a release. Maybe this is the moment where the wheel comes back around and you finally choose a different version of you. Maybe this is your cycle break.

Wisdom Walk

11,296 views • 6 months ago