Axiom Report 2026-05-25
2 min read
Specifically, they only try to avoid wasted effort. Importantly, this means work that leads nowhere or feels pointless. Consequently, when an action seems meaningful or rewarding, people will invest energy happily.
Therefore, schools and companies should focus less on making tasks easy. Instead, they should make work feel justified and useful to the people doing it. Thus, this new view helps explain why we enjoy difficult hobbies.
| Aspect | Traditional Psychological View | New Paradigm from Research |
|---|---|---|
| Fundamental Motivation | Humans and animals are inherently wired to avoid effort because exertion is intrinsically unpleasant, driven by a “law of laziness” or principle of least effort. | Effort is a neutral currency; individuals actively avoid wasted effort (investment yielding no progress or unjustified cost), not effort itself. When effort is meaningful or rewarded, it can be satisfying. |
| Child Development Evidence | Implies effort aversion should manifest early in development as a biological predisposition. | Infants and young children show no spontaneous aversion to effort; they engage freely and associate it with pleasure. For example, 10-month-olds increase effort after observing perseverance, and 6-year-olds smile more after difficult tasks, indicating effort adds value. |
| Behavioral Studies & Least Effort Principle | People and animals always prefer the path of least |
Avoiding Wasted Effort
In addition, research reveals that people do not inherently avoid effort; instead, they avoid wasted effort. Consequently, effort is a neutral currency that becomes satisfying when meaningful. Similarly, children show no aversion to effort, and they even find resistance valuable. Moreover, this shifts understanding of human motivation. Furthermore, institutions should focus on making tasks justified rather than easier. Additionally, this framework solves the paradox of effort by showing effort as a cost-benefit choice.
Redefining Effort in Human Behavior
This indicates the core insight: humans avoid wasted effort, not effort itself. Therefore, exertion becomes aversive only when perceived as pointless or unrewarded. Similarly, children show effort is neutral, finding satisfaction in difficult tasks. Moreover, dopamine reductions can make effort truly unpleasant. Consequently, the key is providing meaningful rewards, not simplifying tasks.
“Another possible interpretation: is that it’s not the actual effort that individuals avoid, it’s the effort wasted – effort that leads you nowhere or whose benefits do not justify putting in the effort.”
Ultimately, this research challenges the long-held idea that humans are naturally lazy. Consequently, it shows we avoid effort that seems wasted or meaningless, not effort itself.
Therefore, this new view changes how we should design work, school, and support systems. As a result, the focus must shift from making tasks easier to making them clearly justified and valuable to everyone involved.




