A Radical Minimalism Manifesto
The Manifesto
Creation is a commodity.
Adding has become cheap. Gradually, over decades, complexifying became commoditized. GPT adds. Interns add. Everyone adds. Features multiply. Options accumulate. Abstractions layer upon abstractions.
What makes complexity survive is subtraction.
Removing the nonessential. The nonuniform. The almost-right. The thing that seemed clever yesterday.
It is the minimal designs that are at the heart of perfection.
The Japanese call it hikizan no bigaku—the beauty of subtraction. Not minimalism as aesthetic choice. Minimalism as the only path to durability.
Deliberations
Why Now?
The cost of creation has collapsed. Code generation, content generation, design generation—all approaching zero marginal cost. When adding is free, addition loses meaning. The bottleneck shifts.
The new scarcity: judgment about what to remove.
The Subtraction Neglect Problem
Researchers at University of Virginia (Adams et al., 2021) [1] ran experiments. They asked people to improve things—writing, Lego structures, travel itineraries, soup recipes. Across domains, participants defaulted to adding. Subtracting wasn't considered until explicitly prompted.
"People systematically overlook subtractive changes... even when subtracting is more efficient."
We are wired to add. Evolution favored acquisition. Our instincts betray us in an age of abundance.
The Diogenes Test
Diogenes of Sinope [2], 4th century BC. Lived in a clay jar. Owned a cloak, a walking stick, a cup. One day he saw a boy drink water from cupped hands. Diogenes threw away his cup.
"He has outdone me in simplicity."
This is the test: can someone outdo you in simplicity while achieving the same result? If yes, you haven't finished editing.
Japanese Concepts
Hikizan no Bigaku [3] — The beauty of subtraction. Rooted in Zen Buddhism. The appreciation for removing the unnecessary to reveal essence.
Mu — Nothingness. Not void, but the removal of what doesn't belong. By letting go of excess, we find clarity.
Ma — The space between. Negative space. The pause in music. The emptiness that defines form. In Japanese design, ma is not absence—it is presence of another kind.
Kanso — Elimination of clutter. What remains should be essential, should age well, should be repairable.
The Saint-Exupéry Standard
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, aviator and author, 1939:
"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."
He was writing about aircraft design. Every gram matters when you're crossing oceans. The principle generalizes.
Mies van der Rohe
"Less is more."
Three words that defined 20th century architecture. Mies didn't mean aesthetic minimalism. He meant: arrange the necessary components such that each serves multiple purposes. Reduce until you can't reduce further without losing function.
Dieter Rams
Ten principles of good design [4]. Two are relevant:
- Good design is as little design as possible
- Good design is unobtrusive
Rams influenced Japanese designers. Japanese aesthetics influenced Rams. The feedback loop produced objects that last decades.
The Practice
The amateur adds until it works. The master removes until it breaks.
Code that lasts: edited ruthlessly. Design that endures: stripped to skeleton. Ideas that spread: compressed to essence.
Your value isn't what you create. It's what survives your editing.
Working Principles
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Subtract before you add — When facing a problem, first ask: what can I remove?
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If you can't remove it, you don't understand it — Inability to simplify reveals incomplete understanding.
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The pause says more than the words — Ma. Negative space. What you leave out defines what remains.
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Own nothing that owns you — Diogenes. Possessions become obligations.
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Perfection = nothing left to take away — Saint-Exupéry's test. Apply to code, design, writing, life.
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Complexity that survives has been edited — The filter matters more than the source.
Working version. December 2025.
Creation is commodity. Curation is the work.
References
[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03380-y
[2] https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/diogenes-sinope/
[3] https://japanbite.com/blogs/news/subtracting-to-add-beauty-the-art-of-simplicity-in-japan