Natural systems minimize action: the universe is deeply lazy
Think of a very lazy shop proprietor who still keeps customers satisfied — organized enough to keep things running, but whose natural mode is deep, breathing ease. The universe might have this personality.
Christopher Alexander noticed the pattern across many physical systems: soap bubbles minimize surface area, electric current takes the path of least resistance, rivers meander in ways that minimize potential energy. The physics term for it is the principle of least action. "Many systems do evolve in the direction that minimizes their potential energy," he writes. The deeper question — why? — he leaves open.
The laziness isn't sloppiness. It's structural. The universe defaults to the easiest path that maintains coherence. What looks like passivity is a very effective generative strategy.
| System | Lazy behavior |
|---|---|
| Soap bubble | Minimizes surface area |
| Electric current | Takes path of least resistance (Ohm's law) |
| River meander | Minimizes potential energy |
Source claim: Natural systems converge on configurations that minimize potential energy, suggesting laziness is a deep structural principle of the universe rather than an absence of activity.