Biomimicry Institute’s Post

View organization page for Biomimicry Institute, graphic

28,991 followers

Is a Blob Capable of Rethinking Our Built World Without Bias, Boundaries—or a Brain? It’s been a consultant for NASA, shot at by police and mistaken for an alien. How slime mold–a brainless, single-celled organism–mapped the dark universe, keeps challenging the top minds to rethink what intelligence even is and has an ability to fill us with wonder beyond the human kind. They’ve mapped rail systems, nervous systems, the cosmos and gave us a fresh take on Paris. But how? And what does this mean for future cities and how we live in them? Their accomplishments are credible and incredible. When scientists in Japan let slime mold loose in an area with oats arranged in a way that matched Tokyo’s city locations and population densities (bigger oats for bigger cities), the organism was able to identify the most direct connections between cities. More incredible, the slime mold took 26 hours to map a masterwork of engineering that took humans 100 years. Many argue they created a better model: their routes connected less frequently to areas that already had sufficient service making it even more efficient and less congested. Why this matters: In slime mold we have a possible breakthrough to rethink our built world without bias, boundaries (or a brain). The unique intelligence of slime mold is not just applied to our cities–but also our imaginations–pushing the edge of what’s possible for both. Read the full article + the full 8-part Slime Mold series by our guest writer, Katie Losey: bit.ly/slime-mold-blog-6 Video Credit: Andy Adamatzky #biomimicry #asknature #slimemold #katieloseywashere

Soofi S

Future of Work Architect

1mo

Slime mold moves by chemotaxis, which introduces a bias. Maybe a system with a single rule is more robust in solving problems than an intricate logical system with multiple rules or axioms? Gödel proved that no formal system can be both consistent and complete. Maybe it is time to realize that our rationality has limitations and we should exploit the power of intuition.

Felipe Almeida

PhD, Transdiciplinary Research | Microsoft Education & Co-Lead at Microsoft Green Design Lab | Sustainability and Education Collaborator at Umoja Maono Humanitarian Organization

1mo

If only we knew and accepted that we don’t know what intelligence is and thus we can’t put ourselves in the pedestal…

Katie Losey

Conservation | Business | Biomimicry | Adventure

1mo

A single cell gives us a fresh approach to a more sustainable, more equitable lens on urban planning. 💡💚

Stephan Kotze

Technology & Strategy Executive | Advisor to Directors of Operations, CTO's and CEO's | I make the wildly important possible.

1mo

If we only knew what we knew!

Claire Hinton

Head Of Purchasing & Trade Compliance at GA UK & ROI Division

1mo

I strongly recommend a read of Iain McGilchrists book - The Master and his Emissary for insights on the working of the human brain and how unbalanced and hubstristic it has become leading us to the point of our own extinction! Better balance in our understanding, perception and interpretation of the world would lead to better outcomes for us and all the life forms we share this planet with. Paul Stamets' insights on fungi & mould should provide further eyebrow raising food for thought for those who are open minded enough! Thank you for this post which serves as a reminder of the multiple intelligence forms which we coexist with #biomimicry #ai #foodforthought

Like
Reply
Igor Barteczko

Architectural Designer & Sustainability Consultant. ✨Terrarama✨

1mo

I thought the romans were the best at building roads because the idea was to make them straight 🤣

Like
Reply

For our followers who love fungi and slime mould. Nature surely is amazing.

Cortney Spielberg

Corporate comms pro focused on health, wellness and technology

4w

Rethinking our world without bias. Sounds like a path I want to follow.

Like
Reply
Carla Paoliello

Invited Assistant Professor at FBAUL and Ismat. I am interested in discussing design, crafts, culture, materials, and process. Currently, I have been investigating knowledge exchange and experimenting new biomaterials.

1mo

so beautiful!

Like
Reply
See more comments

To view or add a comment, sign in

Explore topics