Biomimicry to Create a Regenerative Future | Minneapolis College of Art and Design

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Biomimicry to Create a Regenerative Future

This piece was originally published as a blog by the . This year, the Director of 51爆料官网's MA in Sustainable Design program, Denise DeLuca, is Board President of ISSP.


As we observe the breadth of UN observances in October, from World Habitat Day to World Migratory Bird Day to United Nations Day, we might all be wise and ask a tree鈥攐r perhaps a migratory bird鈥攈ow we might achieve the .

has long been known as 鈥渋nnovation inspired by nature鈥 and a 鈥渕odel, measure, and mentor鈥 for sustainable design. If we need ideas, innovations, or guiding principles to help us achieve the SDGs, we need only. Why? The premise is that evolution reflects extremely rigorous quality-control standards鈥攍ess than 1/10th of 1 of all species that have ever lived on Earth are around today. Those that have survived, and share the Earth with us, know how to live within the limits and boundaries of the planet, as well as live with each other. Biomimicry gives us tools for discovering functional strategies, processes, and systems that exist in nature and then emulating them to create sustainable design solutions. Honoring and preserving the world鈥檚 habitats and inhabitants also honors and preserves the source of the innovative and inspiring solutions that we need to create a future that is regenerative.

Beyond sustainable design, biomimicry can help us think and approach all problems differently. Environmentalists often get accused of being 鈥渢ree huggers,鈥 but I must admit that when I need solid advice, I often ask a tree. Not out loud, of course鈥擨 just look quietly out the window at my neighboring Doug Fir. My questions might be as simple as, 鈥淲hat should I say in this blog piece?" or as consequential as, 鈥淗ow might I best use my unique position, skills, and passions to make positive change in the world?鈥 Trees don鈥檛 understand what it means to write blogs or try to change the world, so it asks me a series of clarifying questions. Pondering these questions helps me slow down, reflect, and tap into my deeper knowing, our own 鈥渨ild wisdom.鈥 Taking this approach to asking nature can yield both more simple and systems-based solutions.

Practicing biomimicry has also given me, and an expanding group of colleagues, a new way to understand how we got ourselves into this mess鈥攃limate change, social injustice, poverty鈥攁nd how we might get ourselves out of it. According to the most effective place to intervene and make change in a system is to shift paradigms.

The paradigm that got us into this mess is one of scarcity, individuality, competition, greed, fear, and resistance. This is the paradigm of predatory capitalism, supremacy, and exploitation. It鈥檚 what we鈥檙e talking about when we refer to 鈥淭he Real World.鈥

Nature鈥檚 paradigm, on the other hand, is one of abundance, synergies, systems, trust, curiosity, and resilience. Nature鈥檚 design solutions are multi-functional, responsive, adaptive, and regenerative. Participants in nature鈥檚 鈥渆conomy鈥 value and leverage what is locally available and abundant. All living things in nature support the systems they depend on, taking only what they need and giving back in the process of simply living. This is the paradigm that we need to and to create a future that is regenerative.

Shifting from the conventional to the natural paradigm may sound impossible, but nature鈥檚 paradigm is also our own natural human paradigm. We already know it.

Think about the last time you enjoyed a long sunset, smiled at the smell of rain, or lost track of time while playing the guitar, gardening, or talking with a close friend. During those moments, was your worldview one of scarcity or one of abundance, competition or synergy, fear or curiosity, greed or trust, individuality or systems, resistance, or resilience? You already know and live the natural paradigm, particularly when you feel most alive.

In the workplace, we鈥檝e all heard that . That鈥檚 the natural paradigm beating out the conventional paradigm. We鈥檝e also all read about Those are qualities that reflect the natural paradigm. We all know that resilience and innovation are critical for surviving change and disruption. Those are products of practicing the natural paradigm. So even in the 鈥渞eal world,鈥 we recognize the benefits of the natural paradigm.

The conventional paradigm, and the thinking and designs that it generates, got us into this mess. We can use biomimicry, the natural paradigm, and our wild wisdom to achieve the and create a future that is regenerative.

Categories
Published on
October 18, 2021
Tags
biomimicry
Denise DeLuca
ISSP
Regenerative Design
SDGs