“If the present planting of humanity upon Spaceship Earth cannot comprehend this inexorable process and discipline itself to serve exclusively that function of metaphysical mastering of the physical it will be discontinued” Philosophy QuotesPhilosophical MusingsPolitics ObservationBuckminster FullerPolitical InsanitySystems Philosophy Author:F. Buckminster Fuller
“As one of my teachers, Buckminster Fuller, says, we were given a right foot and a left foot, not a right foot and a wrong foot. The point is that, there's always two points of view out there, and we need to increase our ability to allow another point of view. Then we have a better chance for peace.” NeedsTwoLeftGivenChanceAbilityViewsTeacherFeetIncreasePoint Of ViewBuckminster Fuller Author:Robert Kiyosaki
“I think that surprisingly few people right now know much about [Buckminster] Fuller beyond the few really iconic points. He invented the geodesic dome and he coined the term "spaceship earth" and that's pretty much the extent of what people who even have heard of him know. And I'm struck by how many people have not heard of him at all.” PeopleThinkingKnowsEarthTermHeardRight NowIconicSpaceshipsDomesBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“You have those who have been living and breathing Buckminster Fuller ever since he converted them to his cult and to be honest, I'm really not interested in that audience at all. I think that they're going to die out soon enough.” ThinkingHas BeensEnoughDiesAudienceHonestBeing HonestBreathingNot InterestedCultSoon EnoughBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“To me, the reason to write about [Buckminster] Fuller is because I think that he has ideas that are incredibly pertinent.” ThinkingWritingIdeasReasonPertinentBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“First of all, [Buckminster Fuller's] identification of the problems that are all that much more pertinent, all that much more pressing in the world today than in his own lifetime from sustainability in terms of the environment to income inequality.” WorldFirstsProblemTodayTermEnvironmentLifetimeIncomeInequalitySustainabilityWorld TodayIdentificationIncome InequalityPertinentBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“All sorts of problems and the interconnectedness between them that [Buckminster Fuller] was able to perceive sometimes rightly, often wrongly, always interestingly and also the fact that he was looking at solutions often that were not feasible in his own time but potentially could be applied today.” SometimesFactsProblemTodayAbleSolutionsPerceiveInterconnectednessBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“The interesting thing writing about [Buckminster] Fuller is really to attempt to resurrect all of that and to do so for a new generation that has not grown up with him.” WritingInterestingGenerationsInteresting ThingsNew GenerationBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I didn't grow up with [Buckminster Fuller]. I never met him. I was once close to meeting him as a child at a ski resort one summer. He died in 1983. Only in 1999 or so, 2000, when I was working as an editor at San Francisco Magazine, did I really come back around to that name because Stanford University had just acquired the archive.” ChildrenNamesGrowsGrowing UpMetsSummerDiedMeetingsUniversityMagazinesEditorsResortsSan FranciscoSkisArchivesStanfordStanford UniversityBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I became really absorbed but again I was at that point - and I still remain today - an outsider who has no interest in becoming an insider, let alone in what that insider perspective on [Buckminster Fuller] has come to be and come to represent.” StillsTodayInterestPerspectiveBecomingOutsidersInsidersBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Writing a book about [Buckminster Fuller] in the sense of deciding how much to - how much biographically to gloss over and how much I can leave out is relatively easy as it is because the true believers already know everything. They know a lot of things that are not true and they know a lot of things that I thought were (and seems there's very good evidence not to believe) and therefore, my starting point was I think to tell his myth because that's what grabbed me.” ThinkingKnowsWritingBelieveI CanBookSeemsEasyEvidenceStartingVery GoodMythBelieverWriting A BookStarting PointTrue BelieverGlossBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I was totally taken in and totally taken by that myth starting in 1999, rather carelessly writing about this archive and starting to read [Buckminster Fuller] self-representation, misrepresentation, whatever you want to call it.” WantWritingSelfTakenStartingMythRepresentationArchivesMisrepresentationBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Just getting totally absorbed in that and therefore when I came back around to [Buckminster Fuller] and found that much of it was made up, I realized that nevertheless, it really was crucial, crucial for how he understood himself, I believe, and certainly crucial for how anyone else ever engaged in his ideas and therefore as a starting point, how can we engage in his ideas today, but with a remove of knowing that it is a myth and being able to navigate it in that sort of level, at that level of reading him as a story.” BelieveMadeIdeasStoriesTodayAbleReadingFoundI BelieveLevelsKnowingUnderstoodStartingMythI RealizedEngagedRemoveCrucialNeverthelessStarting PointNavigateBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I was interested first of all in trying to capture this myth that was always changing and to create some sort of a master story, some version of the myth that resonated with me, since I could have taken more or less any detail that I wanted or the opposite and try to put that down on the page in a way that I could express from that outset for myself and for our readers what it was that was so magical about [Buckminster] Fuller's way of putting together the world.” WorldWayTryingFirstsStoriesWantedTogetherTakenMastersReaderPagesOppositesDetailsMythVersionsCaptureBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I think it was impossible not to come upon a lot of confabulation simply because any good scholarship that has been done since [Buckminster Fuller] death has really delved in that.” ThinkingHas BeensDoneImpossibleScholarshipBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Just enough of that to be able to give the reader a sense of skepticism that all - it seemed like all that was necessary. I don't really care. But what I do care about is what was happening within the realm of automobiles at the time that [Buckminster Fuller] invented his Dymaxion car because that is really relevant.” GivingEnoughCareAbleCarReaderHappeningsRealmsRelevantSkepticismAutomobileBuckminster FullerI Do Care Author:Jonathon Keats
“[Buckminster] Fuller said that everything at the time was basically a horse and buggy in the form of an automobile and it had that boxiness and basically aeronautics hadn't been invented.” SaidFormHorseAutomobileBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“[Buckminster Fuller] started talking about it far enough afterwards, an audience that was far enough from when they - when the air flow and the Zephyr and these cars in the time period that were made by mainstream automakers. It was far enough in the future, far enough after that point that nobody really bothered to fact-check.” MadeEnoughFactsTalkingAudienceAirCarPeriodsFlowChecksMainstreamBotheredTime PeriodsBuckminster FullerZephyr Author:Jonathon Keats
“There were other auto manufacturers that were confabulating as much as [Buckminster Fuller] was, making claims about how cars resembled this or that aspect of nature.” CarAspectClaimsBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“On the other hand, the way in which that car fit into this whole very roundabout way of attempting to solve the problem of what - the problem that [Buckminster Fuller] perceived as being the cause of his daughter's death and meningitis. I mean how you get from your daughter dying from meningitis to making a car with three wheels and saying that it's like a bird and a fish. That really is amazing.” WayMeanWholeProblemHandsThreeCausesDyingCarFitBirdDaughterFishesSolveWheelsAttemptingOur DaughterYour DaughterBuckminster FullerMeningitis Author:Jonathon Keats
“Once you start backing into all of that, then you see this incredibly intricate, totally wrong-headed way to do things, but nevertheless has a lot of merit to it for the fact that [Buckminster Fuller] is recognizing much larger patterns, seeking much larger patterns and seeking much larger ways of trying to solve for the problem of unhygienic conditions in slums. They really were unhygienic. Whether his family was living in the slum is debatable but they were unhygienic. That needed to be addressed. He was attempting to address it.” WayTryingFactsProblemConditionsNeededPatternsSeekingSolveMeritAddressesNeverthelessRecognizingAttemptingIntricateSlumsBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I think that [Buckminster] Fuller certainly would have found a way in which to be funded by Google in a way that he was funded by the Marine Corps and everybody else. He would have remained obstinately his own creature.” ThinkingWayFoundCreaturesGoogleMarineMarine CorpsBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“What I think is really interesting is to look at the culture of disruption and of world-changing in terms of what [Buckminster] Fuller was doing and to draw the contrast more than the similarity.” ThinkingWorldLooksCultureTermInterestingDrawsContrastReally InterestingSimilarityDisruptionBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I think that in the first place, why we can get excited about [Buckminster ] Fuller, why it's plausible that people might - why my publisher would publish this book [You belong to the universe] about it long after he's dead and irrelevant by many standards has to do with the fact that he was in a sense coming up with this job for himself that is the job that we now refer to when we speak about world change.” PeopleThinkingWorldFirstsLongBookFactsMightJobsUniverseSpeakStandardsExcitedPublishersIrrelevantPublishPlausibleBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“We clearly recognize the need for something that is what [Buckminster Fuller] represents and therefore it becomes really useful and really interesting to look at the ways in which world changing today totally misses everything that was valuable.” WorldWayNeedsLooksTodayInterestingMissingValuableReally InterestingBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Where Google and [Buckminster] Fuller overlap are in the potential for putting together disparate technologies in ways that can lead to something that might be a larger solution to a larger problem.” WayProblemMightTogetherTechnologySolutionsGoogleBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“[Buckminster] Fuller was an independent operator coming up with these madcap ways of combining things with absolutely no strings attached and the fact that world changing now is happening within the corporation by and large, and that disruption is ironically what corporations do.” WorldWayFactsHappeningsIndependentCorporationsStringsDisruptionCombiningOperatorsBuckminster FullerStrings AttachedNo Strings Attached Author:Jonathon Keats
“I would certainly never want to inflict anything on the world exactly as [Buckminster Fuller] envisioned it because there is a technocratic worldview that I find horrific.” WorldWantWorldviewHorrificBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“[Buckminster] Fuller's idea of progress is a very 1950s organization man out of the military sort of idea of progress. So as a result, you have something like: we've got bad weather in New York City; let's put a dome over it. And so I don't want to put a dome over Manhattan and I hope that nobody who ends up reading the book wants to do so as a result.” MenWantBookIdeasEndsReadingResultsCitiesProgressMilitaryNew YorkOrganizationWeatherOver ItNew York CityManhattanDomesBad WeatherBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“I would say that what the value of talking about and thinking about a dome over Manhattan is that [Buckminster] Fuller has identified a scale of action I think is actually really compelling.” ThinkingActionValuesTalkingScalesCompellingManhattanDomesBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Architects in urban planning are talking about this but they're not talking about it yet I don't think at that level that [Buckminster] Fuller is talking about when he talked about putting a dome over Manhattan, which is to say an attempt at integrating all of these different technologies in a way that makes for a city that, without having an actual dome, thermodynamically manages the heat flow for that urban environment and therefore makes it so that it is a highly efficient machine for a living or a dwelling machine as he would have preferred in terms of thermodynamically optimizing it.” ThinkingWayDifferentTermLevelsCitiesTalkingTechnologyEnvironmentFlowMachinesPlanningManageHeatArchitectEfficientUrbanDwellingManhattanIntegratingNot TalkingDomesUrban PlanningBuckminster FullerUrban Environment Author:Jonathon Keats
“My work is very eclectic. I write books that range from writing fiction, writing fable where I am very directly trying to imagine alternate worlds, to writing about [Buckminster] Fuller who was the ultimate world man creating all sorts of alternate worlds and believing that they were imminent to my own work of - for instance, a project that I've been working on for some year and a half, two years now that continues to evolve has been what I call Deep Time Photography.” MenWorldWritingTryingYearsBelieveHas BeensTwoBookMy OwnHalfFictionImagineProjectsCreatingPhotographyUltimateInstanceEvolveRangeTwo YearsFablesFiction WritingWriting FictionEclecticBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“We're back around to [Buckminster] Fuller again. Back around to the recognition of patterns, which may be true or may not be. But nevertheless, have enough of a semblance that they're worth exploring. That, to me, is where my work begins.” MayEnoughPatternsBeing TrueRecognitionNeverthelessExploringSemblanceBuckminster Fuller Author:Jonathon Keats
“Buckminster Fuller was down in Pennsylvania, then he'd come up and go to his island in Maine. He wanted to remain a New Englander. He taught from '48 to '49 and '50 at Black Mountain College. That's where he met Kenneth Snelson. Fuller kind of stayed a Yankee right in the New England area. So it was pretty easy to get him to come on over, and we would have lectures at the Harvard Science Center.” KindWantedEasyBlackTaughtCollegeMetsMountainAreasEnglandCome UpIslandsYankeesLecturesHarvardEasy To GetNew EnglandPennsylvaniaMaineBuckminster FullerKenneth Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller] always liked to say that he got kicked out of Harvard three times. Mostly you only got kicked out once, but he kept coming back.” ThreeThree TimesComing BackHarvardBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller ] never got past his freshman year [in Harvard], because the guy was an insane womanizer and he did parties every night, never studied anything, never took a note, didn't care about anything and just had a blast. So they said, "We gotta let you go. You get zeros all the time." Today it wouldn't even matter, because they don't care if you can read.” IfsYearsSaidMatterCareTodayPastNightGuyPartyNotesDon't CareInsaneEvery NightThey SaidHarvardBlastFreshmanLetting You GoBuckminster FullerFreshman YearWomanizer Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller] was quite willing to talk. He'd talk at the drop of a hat.I learned to talk in front of people by listening to the way he did things. Because he would give lessons in how to lecture. He would say, "Never take a note, just stand up and start babbling. And then eventually you're going to be able to make some coherent statements, and so it's like you're vamping. And then people will gradually start to listen to you when this spot of logic shows up in this torrent of verbiage.” PeopleWayGivingShowsAbleFrontsWillingLike YouListeningLessonsLogicNotesStatementsSpotsHatsLecturesBabblingBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller] could do four, five hours straight where some people would leave, eat, get a snooze and come back and he's still going. He was like a fireplug.” PeopleStillsHoursFiveFourBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“I started modeling myself on [ Buckminster Fuller], like with the hair. I reached an age where I sort of, kind of, looked like him a little bit, you know? I thought it was great.” KnowsKindLittlesAgeBitsHairLittle BitModelingBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“We would go on retreats to Florence. The people in the planning team got to be good friends and so we did things like, we'd all go over to the Fort Belvedere in Florence and take that thing over. Because it's up for grabs, you can rent it. And then have New Age meetings and all that kind of stuff. [Buckminster] Fuller loved to go there.” PeopleKindAgeStuffTeamGoes OnMeetingsBe GoodPlanningGood FriendRetreatNew AgeFortsFlorenceBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“I would have private conversations with [Buckminster Fuller]. I once had an argument, for four hours, about the existence of the Mobius strip. Because he believed in the Klein Bottle, you see. And I said, "How in hell can you claim to believe in the Klein Bottle and think that the Mobius strip is dubious?" He said, "Well, it's a torus." I don't know what he had in his mind as a mathematical background, because I don't think he got topology. Because, in other words, the Mobius strip didn't have angles in it.” ThinkingKnowsMindBelieveWellsSaidHoursExistenceHellFourConversationArgumentClaimsBackgroundsMathematicalBottlesAngleDubiousBuckminster FullerTopology Author:Paul Laffoley
“The tetrahedron was [ Buckminster Fuller's] big thing. He'd talk about it in the same way Plato talked about angles.” WayBigsAnglePlatoBig ThingsBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“I said, "Well, why do you believe in the Klein Bottle?" He said, "Because I can imagine it." I said, "You don't have to imagine a Mobius strip. It's right there in front of you!" But [Buckminster Fuller] couldn't see how that could involve a cross cap, meaning something that couldn't be reduced to a two-dimensional surface. Which it does. It's because he was thinking that the matrix was the thing that a fly could walk over the edge of, like a torus.” ThinkingBelieveWellsDoeSaidI CanTwoWalksImagineFrontsCrossesEdgesSurfaceBottlesCapsBecause I CanOver The EdgeBuckminster FullerMeaning Something Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller] was quite a Newtonian in certain ways. But he was an excellent inventor and kept people on their toes.” PeopleWayCertainExcellentToesInventorBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“[Buckminster Fuller] would pretend to be deaf at the right times.” Right TimeDeafBuckminster Fuller Author:Paul Laffoley
“Buckminster Fuller himself was fond of stating that what seems to be happening at the moment is never the full story of what is really going on. He liked to point out that for the honey bee, it is the honey that is important. But the bee is at the same time nature's vehicle for carrying out cross-pollination of the flowers. Interconnectedness is a fundamental principle of nature. Nothing is isolated. Each event connects with others.” ImportantMomentsStoriesSeemsPrinciplesEventsFlowerMindfulnessHappeningsCrossesFundamentalsHoneyIsolatedVehicleBeesInterconnectednessFundamental PrinciplesBuckminster FullerHoney BeePollination Author:Jon Kabat-Zinn