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Evolutionary Design: design according to Nature

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The way we currently design houses, consumer products, and other technological artifacts is obsolete and harmful. While there is a growing consciousness concerning environmental impact and so-called appropriate technology and some progress is noted in the mainstream, the most promising ideas are found at the “fringe,” in the domain of a group of visionaries here called the “outlaw designers.” The inspiration for the right solutions can be found all around us by appropriately drawing from Nature’s design techniques. It requires a profound change in our compartimented way of thinking to properly understand Nature’s systemic and synergetic quality. Applying this holistic view to the design of houses and other products will lead to better integration with the surroundings, with the users, and reduce considerably the environmental footprint. We briefly list architect Eugene Tsui’s principles of Evolutionary Architecture, which represent a Nature-inspired, bold and necessary departure from tradition in building appropriate shelters. In the same spirit, we also propose a series of 12 evolutionary design principles to be applied to small scale technological products.

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Remember the 80s?

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Building on the social progress of the sixties and the many innovations rooted in the seventies (such as the personal computer, the cellular phone, and the Internet), the eighties was a hopeful decade. It saw the end of the cold war, the birth of a new environmental consciousness, and positive progress in both science and art. However, many initiatives and innovations which developed in a promising manner in the eighties have failed to live up to their expectations. Indeed, the mood has shifted from hopeful to cynical, from possibility to pessimism, from spiritual to material. Thankfully, there are signs of a turnaround.

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