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Buckminster (Bucky) Fuller is
one of our greatest teachers. This excerpt about Bucky
is from the Buckminster Fuller Institute website(www.bfi.org).
If you are interested in finding out more about Buckys
body of work, we recommend you spend some time roaming
around this great website!
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"For the first time in history it is now possible to
take care of everybody at a higher standard of living than
any have every known. Only ten years ago the - 'more with
less' technology reached the point where this could be done.
All humanity now has the option to become enduringly successful."
This confident assertion was made in 1980 by the late R.
Buckminster Fullerinventor, architect, engineer, mathematician,
poet and cosmologist. As early as 1959, Newsweek reported
that Fuller predicted the conquest of poverty by the year
2000. In 1977, almost twenty years later, the National Academy
of Sciences confirmed Fullers prediction. Their World
Food and Nutrition Study, prepared by 1,500 scientists, concluded,
"If there is the political will in this country and abroad
. . . it should be possible to overcome the worst aspects
of widespread hunger and malnutrition within one generation."
Even with tragedies like Ethiopia and Somalia, it is becoming
clear that, as Fuller predicted, we have arrived at the possibility
of eliminating hunger and poverty in all the world within
our lifetime.
Buckminster Fuller was truly a man ahead of his time. His
lifelong goal was the development of what he called "Comprehensive
Anticipatory Design Science"the attempt to anticipate
and solve humanitys major problems through the highest
technology by providing "more and more life support for
everybody, with less and less resources."
Fuller was a practical philosopher who demonstrated his ideas
as inventions that he called "artifacts." Some were
built as prototypes; others exist only on paper; all he felt
were technically viable. He was a dogged individualist whose
genius was felt throughout the world for nearly half a century.
Even Albert Einstein was prompted to say to him, "Young
man, you amaze me!"
In 1927, at the age of 32, Buckminster Fuller stood on the
shores of Lake Michigan, prepared to throw himself into the
freezing waters. His first child had died. He was bankrupt,
discredited and jobless, and he had a wife and new-born daughter.
On the verge of suicide, it suddenly struck him that his life
belonged, not to himself, but to the universe. He chose at
that moment to embark on what he called "an experiment
to discover what the little, penniless, unknown individual
might be able to do effectively on behalf of all humanity."
Over the next fifty-four years, he proved, time and again,
that his most controversial ideas were practical and workable.
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During the course of his remarkable experiment he:
- Was awarded 25 U.S. patents
- Authored 28 books
- Received 47 honorary doctorates in the arts, science,
engineering and the humanities
- Received dozens of major architectural and design awards
including, among many others, the Gold Medal of the American
Institute of Architects and the Gold Medal of the Royal
Institute of British Architects
- Created work which found itself into the permanent collections
of museums around the world
- Circled the globe 57 times, reaching millions through
his public lectures and interviews.
Buckminster Fuller is best known for the invention of the
geodesic domethe lightest, strongest, and most cost-effective
structure ever devised. The geodesic dome is able to cover
more space without internal supports than any other enclosure.
It becomes proportionally lighter and stronger the larger
it is. The geodesic dome is a breakthrough in shelter, not
only in cost-effectiveness, but in ease of construction. In
1957, a geodesic dome auditorium in Honolulu was put up so
quickly that 22 hours after the parts were delivered, a full
house was comfortably seated inside enjoying a concert.
Today over 300,000 domes dot the globe. Plastic and fiberglass
"radomes" house delicate radar equipment along the
Arctic perimeter, and "radome" weather stations
withstand winds up to 180 mph. Corrugated metal domes have
given shelter to families in Africa, at a cost of $350 per
dome. The U.S. Marine Corps hailed the geodesic dome as "the
first basic improvement in mobile military shelter in 2,600
years." The worlds largest aluminum clear-span
structure is a geodesic dome which houses the "Spruce
Goose" at Long Beach Harbor. Fuller is most famous for
his 20-story dome housing the U.S. Pavilion at Montreals
Expo 67. Later, he documented the feasibility of a dome
two miles in diameter that would enclose mid-town Manhattan
in a temperature-controlled environment, and pay for itself
within ten years from the savings of snow-removal costs alone.
Fuller was one of the earliest proponents of renewable energy
sourcessolar (including wind and wave)which he
incorporated into his designs. He claimed, "there is
no energy crisis, only a crisis of ignorance." His research
demonstrated that humanity could satisfy 100% of its energy
needs while phasing out fossil fuels and atomic energy. For
example, he showed that a wind generator fitted to every high-voltage
transmission tower in the US would generate three-and-a-half
times the countrys total recent power output.
Fuller originated the term "Spaceship Earth." His
Dymaxion Map was awarded the first patent for a cartographic
system and was the first to show continents on a flat surface
without visible distortion, appearing as a one-world island
in a one-world ocean. His World Game® utilizes a large-scale
Dymaxion Map for displaying world resources, and allows players
to strategize solutions to global problems, matching human
needs with resources. His Inventory of World Resources, Human
Trends and Needs was created to serve as an information bank
for the World Game.
In some ways, Fullers most significant artifact is
the extensive personal archives that he maintained throughout
his life. Buckminster Fuller died in July, 1983, leaving behind
him a thoroughly documented 56-year experimenta testament
to the effectiveness of individual initiative.
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