Tag: Post-Capitalist Design

In a world obsessed with convenience, the robot vacuum cleaner appears as a symbol of progress. But from an Eidoist perspective, it fails the test of form. It is not a tool born of necessity, but a product of avoidance—outsourcing presence, rhythm, and discipline to a buzzing machine. Beneath its clean surface lies a network of resource waste, digital complexity, and recognition-driven consumption. It does not simplify life; it disguises laziness as liberation. Eidoism reveals it not as a solution, but as a symptom of a culture trying to automate its way out of being.

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The Eidoism Vehicle is not built to impress—it’s built to function. In contrast to today’s cars, which serve as status symbols wrapped in debt, distraction, and ecological cost, the Eidoism Vehicle strips away the performance game. It returns design to its core: form follows necessity. Repairable, modular, adapted to local needs, and free from branding, this vehicle doesn’t ask who you are—it simply moves you. In doing so, it opens a new market: post-recognition mobility for communities, cooperatives, and conscious consumers.

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