Biomimicry
Biomimicry (also
biomimickry) is the conscious copying of examples and mechanisms from natural organisms and ecologies. It is a form of applied
case-based reasoning, treating nature itself as a database of solutions that already work. Proponents argue that all natural life forms minimize energy and material needs as a matter of survival, so they are the best source of energy-and-material-efficient examples.
Natural Capitalism is a set of economic reforms that specifically rewards such efficiency and harshly punishes waste - in mimicry of the larger process of
ecological selection by which
ecoregions and ecological niches remove failures.
Although almost all engineering could be said to be a form of biomimicry, the modern origins of this field are usually attributed to Buckminster Fuller and its later codification as a field of study to Lynn Margulis.
A political form of biomimcry is bioregional democracy, wherein political borders conform to natural ecoregions rather than human cultures or the outcomes of prior conflicts.
Critics of these approaches often argue that ecological selection itself is a poor model of minimizing manufacturing complexity or conflict, and that the free market relies on conscious cooperation, agreement, and standards as much as on efficiency - more analogous to sexual selection.Charles Darwin himself contended that both were balanced in natural selection - although his contemporaries often avoided frank talk about sex, or any suggestion that free market success was based on persuasion not value.
Advocates, especially in the anti-globalization movement, argue that the mating-like processes of standardization, financing and marketing, are already examples of runaway evolution - rendering a system that appeals to the consumer but which is inefficient at use of energy and raw materials. Biomimicry, they argue, is an effective strategy to restore basic efficiency.
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