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Southern Efficiency

The lackadaisical attitude toward accomplishing tasks in the American south.
This organization is the epitome of Southern Efficiency. The issues just keep piling up.
by DarkArc April 5, 2025
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Efficient Extraction Methods

Techniques designed to maximize the yield of desired resources (water, metals, volatiles) from raw materials (ore, regolith, atmosphere) while minimizing energy input, waste, and environmental footprint. In space, efficiency is survival—every joule of energy and kilogram of mass is precious. Methods include in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) like using solar ovens to bake oxygen out of lunar soil, electrochemical processing of asteroid ore, or passive wind-traps to collect atmospheric moisture on Mars.
Efficient Extraction Methods Example: The MOXIE experiment on the Mars Perseverance rover, which uses electrolysis to efficiently extract breathable oxygen from the carbon dioxide-rich Martian atmosphere, is a prototype Efficient Extraction Method. On the Moon, using concentrated sunlight to thermally reduce ilmenite ore for iron and oxygen is another, as it uses abundant solar energy instead of imported chemicals.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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The theory that efficiency is not a natural or neutral measure but a constructed concept—built by particular interests for particular purposes, shaped by social, economic, and political forces. Efficiency Constructions argues that what counts as "efficient" depends on who's asking, what they value, what they're trying to achieve. An efficient factory from an owner's perspective (maximizing output per worker) may be profoundly inefficient from a worker's perspective (maximizing exploitation). An efficient healthcare system from a budget perspective (minimizing cost) may be inefficient from a patient's perspective (minimizing care). The theory reveals that efficiency is always efficiency-for, never efficiency-in-itself.
Example: "He'd always thought efficiency was just efficiency—a neutral measure of how well things worked. The Theory of Efficiency Constructions showed him otherwise: efficiency was always constructed, always from some perspective. The factory was efficient for profits, not for workers; the policy was efficient for budgets, not for people. He stopped asking 'is it efficient?' and started asking 'efficient for whom?'"
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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A close cousin to the Theory of Efficiency Constructions, this theory emphasizes that efficiency is not discovered but made—built through decisions about what to measure, what to value, what to count. Constructed Efficiency argues that the very definition of efficiency is a social product, shaped by power and interests. An efficient transportation system might mean different things to commuters, environmentalists, and developers—and which definition prevails depends on who has power. The theory calls for examining how efficiency is constructed, whose interests its construction serves, and what alternatives are excluded.
Example: "The city claimed its new transit system was 'efficient.' The Theory of Constructed Efficiency asked: efficient for whom? Commuters? The system was slow. The environment? It ran on diesel. Developers? Property values near stops soared. The efficiency was constructed to serve real estate interests, not riders. Once she saw the construction, she couldn't unsee it."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that efficiency operates within paradigms—frameworks that determine what counts as efficient, what methods are used to measure it, what values it serves. Efficiency Paradigms argues that different paradigms produce different efficiencies: what's efficient in a capitalist paradigm (profit maximization) may be inefficient in an ecological paradigm (sustainability); what's efficient in a bureaucratic paradigm (rule-following) may be inefficient in a creative paradigm (innovation). These paradigms are incommensurable—they can't be directly compared because they define efficiency differently. The theory calls for recognizing which paradigm you're in, and understanding that other paradigms have their own, different efficiencies.
Example: "He couldn't understand why environmentalists called the coal plant 'inefficient' when it produced so much power. The Theory of Efficiency Paradigms explained: they were in different paradigms. His paradigm measured efficiency by output; theirs measured by sustainability. Neither was wrong; they were just measuring different things. He started asking what paradigm he was in, and whether it was the right one."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Efficiency Bias

The cognitive bias where one assumes that their preferred measures of efficiency are simply "efficiency"—neutral, objective, universal—while dismissing other measures as irrelevant or biased. Efficiency Bias is what makes businesspeople assume that profit measures efficiency, that what's good for the bottom line is what works. It's what makes policymakers assume that cost-benefit analysis captures all relevant values. Efficiency Bias treats one construction of efficiency as the construction, one perspective as the perspective. It's the favorite bias of those who benefit from current definitions of efficiency, who don't want to ask "efficient for whom?"
Example: "He presented the profit numbers as proof of efficiency. Efficiency Bias meant he never had to consider environmental costs, worker well-being, community impact. His measure was the measure; everything else was secondary. When she pointed out what was excluded, he dismissed her concerns as 'not relevant to efficiency.' The bias was invisible to him, which is how it worked."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Efficiency Perspectivism

The application of perspectivism to efficiency—the view that efficiency is always seen from a perspective, never from nowhere. Efficiency Perspectivism argues that there is no view-from-nowhere efficiency, no neutral measure that captures how well things work for everyone. Every efficiency claim comes from somewhere, serves some interests, reflects some values. The task is not to find the one true efficiency but to understand different perspectives, to see how efficiency looks from different positions. Efficiency Perspectivism is the philosophy of pluralism in evaluation, of the recognition that how well something works depends on who's asking.
Example: "He'd thought there was one way to measure efficiencythe right way. Efficiency Perspectivism showed him otherwise: efficiency looked different from different perspectives. From management, it was about output; from labor, about working conditions; from community, about local impact. None was the truth; all were true from somewhere. He stopped looking for the one measure and started learning to see from many angles."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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