Why people forget that less is often more

When solving problems, people prefer adding things to getting rid of them


  • by
  • 04 14, 2021
  • in Science and technology

COLIN CHAPMAN, the founder of Lotus Cars, was one of motor racing’s most influential engineers. He summed up his philosophy as “simplify, then add lightness”. A stripped-down, featherweight car might be slower on the straights than a beefy muscle-machine, he reasoned. But it would be faster everywhere else. Between 1962 and 1978 Lotus won seven Formula One constructors championships.It appears to be an uncommon insight. A paper published in suggests that humans struggle with subtractive thinking. When asked to improve something—a Lego-brick structure, an essay, a golf course or a university—they tend to suggest adding new things rather than stripping back what is already there, even when additions lead to sub-par results.

  • Source Why people forget that less is often more
  • you may also like