MEDdesign
Biomimicry – Design Inspired by Nature

Biomimcry is much the way is it sounds.  As the kid’s song on Biomimcry by Amy Martin on her album Ask the Planet, says:  “Bio means ‘life’; mimicry means to ‘imitate.’”  I like to define Biomimcry as “the study of nature to solve human problems.”

Although humans have been watching and learning from nature for a long time there seems to be a growing disconnect. When you think of the Wright brothers do you think of birds? When you peel apart two halves of Velcro do you think of weed seeds sticking to your pants leg? Probably not!

So, when Janine M. Benyus wrote her book Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature in 1997 and coined the word “Biomimcry,” a revival in acknowledging the role of nature in the developments of human kind began to occur. Simultaneously, people began to lend an ear toward nature’s whispers of astuteness and a rekindling of nature’s inspiration began to unfold.

Why would anyone be interested in studying nature to solve modern technical problems in design, engineering, or business management? Talk to someone in the Pharmacological business about the history of their discipline. Talk to Speedo about their record breaking swimsuits in the 2008 Olympics. Talk to Pax Scientific about their blade technology. Ask Columbia Forest Products about their plywood glue. The list of products, technologies and methods currently derived from natural organisms and ecosystems is staggering. The numbers are continually growing and having far reaching effects into every aspect of human life and business. I cannot begin to tell you about all the cool stuff out there in a single blog; for a small taste, I suggest you peruse the www.asknature.org website.

Biomimcry is a multidisciplinary hard science that takes advantage of millions of organisms and nearly four billion years of real life Research and Development where the losers die and the winners procreate.  Many proponents of Biomimcry don’t spend the time to talk to those who believe in theology rather than science, but if you are of a religious mindset, what better way to find answers to your questions than to intimately study God’s creations?

I’ll give you my personal opinion of some major advantages of Biomimicry:

How does ‘Biomimicry’ differ from ‘bio-inspired?’  The major difference is Biomimcry’s guiding principles that are aptly called “Life’s Principles,” which help us to deeply decipher what nature is doing and why it is doing it.  They give us guidance to how nature develops effective solutions while creating conditions conducive to life.  I believe it would be advantageous to delve deeper into these Principles in later blogs.

General topics I will cover in future blogs are:

Until next time,

Rob Lichty

About The Author

Exit mobile version