4.3 Article

Towards a Deeper Philosophy of Biomimicry

Journal

ORGANIZATION & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 364-387

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1086026611425689

Keywords

dualism; biomimicry; sustainability; wu wei; conativity; synergy; genetic architecture; bioinclusive

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Biomimicry as a design concept is indeed revolutionary in its implications for human systems of production, but it is a concept in need of further philosophical elaboration and development. To this end certain philosophical principles underlying the organization of living systems generally are identified and it is argued that not only our systems of production but also our psychocultural patterns of desire need to be reorganized in accordance with these principles if we are collectively to achieve the integration into nature to which biomimicry aspires. Even were this reorganization to be effected however, there is still an ethically momentous ambiguity in biomimicry that needs to be teased out before we can be assured that biomimicry will indeed produce the bioinclusive sustainability outcomes that it seems to promise.

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