Science shows why simplifying is hard and complicating is easy | The Business Standard
Skip to main content
  • Latest
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Industry
    • Analysis
    • Bazaar
    • RMG
    • Corporates
    • Aviation
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Friday
June 27, 2025

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Latest
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Industry
    • Analysis
    • Bazaar
    • RMG
    • Corporates
    • Aviation
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 2025
Science shows why simplifying is hard and complicating is easy

Panorama

Andreas Kluth, Bloomberg
26 April, 2021, 11:05 am
Last modified: 26 April, 2021, 12:50 pm

Related News

  • Science Communicators Competition 2025: Nurturing future Bangladeshi scientists
  • 9th-graders at Chattogram Collegiate School allegedly forced to enroll in science group
  • Cambridge scientists detect possible biosignatures on Exoplanet K2-18b
  • Beyond the hype: The truth behind the ‘de-extinction’ of dire wolves
  • The science behind ‘de-extinction’

Science shows why simplifying is hard and complicating is easy

Our brains appear hardwired to add stuff rather than take things away. That explains a lot about the messes we keep making

Andreas Kluth, Bloomberg
26 April, 2021, 11:05 am
Last modified: 26 April, 2021, 12:50 pm
A storm trooper seeking shelter under a Lego roof. Photo: Bloomberg
A storm trooper seeking shelter under a Lego roof. Photo: Bloomberg

Why is everything so darned complicated? And I really mean everything: our taxes, schedules, bureaucracies, machines, algorithms, org charts, our school and welfare and healthcare systems, you name it.

Even — and I say this as an oft culpable columnist — our diction. "If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out," George Orwell stipulated in one of his rules of writing. I'm tempted to edit him thus: If it is possible to cut a word [out], [always] cut it [out].

The simplicity Orwell yearned for is synonymous with clarity, elegance, efficiency and integrity. It's an ideal a lot of us subscribe to in theory but keep violating in practice. A lamentable secret of the universe seems to be that it takes enormous effort to simplify, but no effort at all to do the opposite. Put differently, it's easier to add things, even unnecessary ones, than to subtract.

The Business Standard Google News Keep updated, follow The Business Standard's Google news channel

That's the insight of a new paper published in Nature and authored by Gabrielle Adams, Benjamin Converse, Andrew Hales and Leidy Klotz, who hail from various faculties at the University of Virginia. In eight observational studies and experiments, they found that people systematically overlook opportunities to improve things by subtracting and default instead to adding.

For example, look at this little storm trooper seeking shelter under a Lego roof. A heavy masonry brick is about to land on the platform right above the poor guy's head. Our job is to renovate the structure so that it doesn't cave in on him, for which we get $1. We can take away Legos or add them from a pile, but each extra brick costs 10 cents.

The simplest and most elegant solution — and by design also the most profitable, netting the whole dollar — is to remove the one brick supporting the roof, so that the platform sits flush on the remaining base. But 59% of participants chose instead to add Legos — placing supports in the three other corners of the base, for instance.

So it went in one experiment after another, whether people were asked to improve the design of a mini-golf hole, a travel itinerary or an essay (Orwell must be turning in his grave). By huge majorities, participants added and rarely subtracted. Asked to edit their own essay, for instance, 80% padded verbiage, only 16% cut. Told to make the image below on the left symmetrical, most people added three shapes rather than taking away one, as shown.

The good news is that the researchers were able to nudge more people in the control groups to consider subtractions by providing cues. In the Lego experiment, for example, they told some people not only that adding pieces costs 10 cents each but also that "removing pieces is free." This wasn't new information. But it appeared to prime the participants' brains to consider other options.

The more intriguing insight was that people became less likely to consider subtraction the more they felt "cognitive load." This is basically brain strain, as when we're distracted by other tasks. (This is why we should never fiddle with our phones while driving.)

Spotting solutions that are simple and elegant, in other words, requires mental effort or what the Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman calls slow as opposed to fast thinking. It's an idea physicists might recognize in the second law of thermodynamics. One form of it says that any system will go from order to disorder, unless you add energy. In the same way, we humans tend to complicate things unless we make an effort not to.

But when we do make that effort, the rewards can be sublime. Look at the two works of art in the picture all the way above. They're by Brancusi, my favorite sculptor. He liked to take ordinary things — in this case, birds — and strip them down to their essentials. The result was beauty.

Or think of how you taught your kids to ride a bike. In my childhood, parents added something clunky, training wheels. These days, we subtract things — pedals and chains — and call the result balance bikes. Our children learn faster, and have more fun.

Would you add or subtract? Photo: Bloomberg
Would you add or subtract? Photo: Bloomberg

If you want a tech example, recall Steve Jobs in his heyday at Apple, when he relentlessly nixed dongles, disc drives, features and other whatchamacallits, even as Microsoft and other rivals kept sinking deeper into their kludges. Or consider Marie Kondo, who's built a brand out of helping people unclutter their own homes.

Then dare to dream what thoughtful subtraction could do for the real mother lodes of self-propagating complexity — the U.S. tax code springs to mind, or the European Union's fiscal rules. We can simplify our lives, but we have to put in the work. That's what the philosopher Blaise Pascal captured when he apologized, "I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time."

Features / Top News

science / complications / easy / hard

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • Photo: Courtesy
    28 Bangladeshis reach Pakistan border from Iran, set to return home: MoFA
  • Turning the tide: Bangladesh shipbreaking sheds hazardous past for green future
    Turning the tide: Bangladesh shipbreaking sheds hazardous past for green future
  • Employees staged a demonstration as part of their ongoing protest demanding the removal of the NBR chairman. Authorities shut the main gate. The photo was taken in front of the NBR headquarters in Agargaon on 26 June 2025. Photos: Syed Zakir Hossain/TBS
    NBR officials open to talks with govt, but protest continues

MOST VIEWED

  • As distributors overcharge, govt plans to sell LPG directly to consumers
    As distributors overcharge, govt plans to sell LPG directly to consumers
  • Representational image. Photo: TBS
    2025 Global Liveability Index: Dhaka slips 3 notches, just ahead of war-torn Tripoli, Damascus
  • For the first time, Shipping Corp to buy two vessels using Tk900cr of its own funds
    For the first time, Shipping Corp to buy two vessels using Tk900cr of its own funds
  • Illustration: Khandaker Abidur Rahman/TBS
    BAT Bangladesh to invest Tk297cr to expand production capacity
  • File Photo: Rajib Dhar/TBS
    Bangladesh no longer just a volume player but a global hub for sustainable RMG products: Commerce secy
  • Screengrab from Thikana talkshow
    Jamaat ameer offers unconditional apology for all past wrongs, including during Liberation War

Related News

  • Science Communicators Competition 2025: Nurturing future Bangladeshi scientists
  • 9th-graders at Chattogram Collegiate School allegedly forced to enroll in science group
  • Cambridge scientists detect possible biosignatures on Exoplanet K2-18b
  • Beyond the hype: The truth behind the ‘de-extinction’ of dire wolves
  • The science behind ‘de-extinction’

Features

Zohran Mamdani gestures as he speaks during a watch party for his primary election, which includes his bid to become the Democratic candidate for New York City mayor in the upcoming November 2025 election, in New York City, US, June 25, 2025. REUTERS/David 'Dee' Delgado

What Bangladesh's young politicians can learn from Zohran Mamdani

10h | Panorama
Footsteps Bangladesh, a development-based social enterprise that dared to take on the task of cleaning a canal, which many considered a lost cause. Photos: Courtesy/Footsteps Bangladesh

A dead canal in Dhaka breathes again — and so do Ramchandrapur's residents

10h | Panorama
Sujoy’s organisation has rescued and released over a thousand birds so far from hunters. Photo: Courtesy

How decades of activism brought national recognition to Sherpur’s wildlife saviours

1d | Panorama
More than half of Dhaka’s street children sleep in slums, with others scattered in terminals, parks, stations, or pavements. Photo: Syed Zakir Hossain

No homes, no hope: The lives of Dhaka’s ‘floating population’

2d | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

The instructions given by the Chief Advisor for installing solar panels on the roofs of government buildings

The instructions given by the Chief Advisor for installing solar panels on the roofs of government buildings

5h | TBS Today
Why Zohran thanked 'Bangladeshi aunties'?

Why Zohran thanked 'Bangladeshi aunties'?

5h | TBS World
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claims 'victory' against US and Israel

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claims 'victory' against US and Israel

6h | TBS World
News of The Day, 26 JUNE 2025

News of The Day, 26 JUNE 2025

7h | TBS News of the day
EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2025
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net