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Buckminster Fuller on Tensegrity Structures
Some brief clips from the "Lost Interviews" tapes with Buckminster Fuller, where Dr. Fuller discusses the nature of Tensegrity (or "Tensional Integrity") in structures.
Просмотров: 95 967

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  • @MaxWill-bt2tk
    @MaxWill-bt2tk 3 месяца назад

    I can make a house Why was this lost and forgotten,?

  • @MrAuswest
    @MrAuswest 4 месяца назад

    Isn't there a much smaller, simpler version of his 'basketball' made from only 6 sticks and elastic? Pretty sure I made one back in the day... It stands in 3D if on a solid surface but if you place a light cloth under it so the 'legs' can move scrunching the cloth together it collapses down to 2D!

  • @jedipdx
    @jedipdx 5 месяцев назад

    Wtf is he saying 😂

    • @MrAuswest
      @MrAuswest 4 месяца назад

      He's saying virtually the same things twice in two different clips!? Almost word for word. Sign of a great mind or of something else?🤔 (He's actually 'explaining' how he 'invented' the Geodesic Dome - the one made up out of triangles by showing us something made from non-connecting sticks!!!???)

  • @RyanPerrella
    @RyanPerrella 5 месяцев назад

    I LOVE YOU BUCKY

  • @stillness0072
    @stillness0072 9 месяцев назад

    Play this video at 1x

  • @bilsid
    @bilsid Год назад

    Play the video at 0.75x

  • @bakchodiwalacontent8585
    @bakchodiwalacontent8585 2 года назад

    Play this video in 2x🤣🤣

    • @LukeMcMurry
      @LukeMcMurry 8 месяцев назад

      I tried all suggested speeds but personally found 1.5 x speed best

  • @planetizedtwentytwenty6810
    @planetizedtwentytwenty6810 4 года назад

    ruclips.net/video/hBd35DOwymM/видео.html

  • @handbanana533
    @handbanana533 4 года назад

    Genius, but I gotta know. Is he speaking English? I am a native English speaker and I have trouble figuring him out.

    • @appidydafoo
      @appidydafoo 3 года назад

      It's just his particular style, which is indeed difficult to comprehend

    • @kevinbeach8743
      @kevinbeach8743 2 года назад

      also sound quality from old footage

  • @zynpxpnr
    @zynpxpnr 4 года назад

    .

  • @localsymbiosis
    @localsymbiosis 4 года назад

    If this is interesting to you, you should check out SynergeticSunrise.com

  • @edwardgorczyca8691
    @edwardgorczyca8691 7 лет назад

    Dear Sir or Madame, I've made many 1D (rod) free standing tension structures. I can show how my 1D structures can be manipulated into 2D discs or plates elements and 3D elements discs or plates with body (thickness). All free standing. My latest work modifies Buckminster or Kenneth Snelson's 30 1D element icosadodecahedron. I joined the element ends resulting in 6 pentagons hoops sort of woven together and suspending each other. I modified the pentagon hoops into star shapes. The last of these star shapes has 18 degree points and 90 degree valleys. I have photos and drawings. I am 84 years old. If I can't find someone interested, my work will be lost. Thank you for the use of your site. Show less REPLY

    • @InTentZManIpulSation
      @InTentZManIpulSation 5 лет назад

      Hello

    • @mikotodragon
      @mikotodragon 5 лет назад

      Sir, did you ever get any help with disseminating your research? I, personally am a very visual learner and would love to see any pictures or video you might have of these structures. I honestly think you may have physically modeled an idea I've been playing with in math. I'm super curious either way if you are still interested to share your work. Best regards!

  • @nicevideomancanada
    @nicevideomancanada 7 лет назад

    The show hosts, Speechless! Ha ha ha... (But now it all makes sense to us. Thanks Bucky)

  • @BurkeLCH
    @BurkeLCH 10 лет назад

    Yes!!!

  • @pixelspring
    @pixelspring 10 лет назад

    Bucky was a genius to be sure... but he also shamelessly never credited Kennith Snelson with the actual invention of tensegrity structures... To be sure Kennith was a former student and developed the concept after listening to Bucky's general ideas... ... but even so ...you should give credit where credit is due.

    • @alesan4341
      @alesan4341 10 лет назад

      "Richard Buckminster Fuller for the good things he inspired in me, especially the love of spatial geometry." Snelson in "Art And Ideas".

    • @BlueGiant69202
      @BlueGiant69202 7 лет назад

      pixelspring It was also traditional at the time for senior researchers to exercise the right to appropriate any idea developed under their guidance as their own. It is a waste of time to perpetually harp about this. Thank you Mr. Snelson.

    • @pixelspring
      @pixelspring 7 лет назад

      One knows of the pathetic unjust truth of your statement, but it in no way excuses the practice, nor does it excuse Mr Fuller for not being the better man. .. We also know the Snelson accredited the inspiration for his structures from a lecture that Bucky gave. One would not have come without the other... but it is only fair to acknowledge those that extend from the foundation as builders in their own right.

    • @paxwallacejazz
      @paxwallacejazz 6 лет назад

      I once talked on the phone with Mr. Snelson to tell him I was building tensegrities in Heidelberg Germany with American high school kids. He was very gracious and Magnanimous he also told me that he did indeed feel slighted by the great Buckminster . If you'd like to see our my startling work go to my channel and watch "Retrieved from the Dustbin "

    • @Wrightbalance
      @Wrightbalance 4 года назад

      I agree with your comments. However, if you explore further you would find that a Russian artist, Karl Loganson had a show of multiple Tensegrity structures in 1921 before Snelson was born. Snelson stood on the shoulders of Loganson as he "developed" his structures in the late 1940's long after Loganson was forgotten. Perhaps Snelson's work was not so original afterall. Loganson passed away in 1927. Snelson never credited Loganson either. I totally agree. Let's give credit where credit is due. This work is changing the world if you look at cell biologist and physician Donald Ingber at the Wyss Institute at Harvard Medical school. He is working at the cellular level using the tensegrity model to demonstrate mechanotransduction where applying isometric pressure to the cytoskeleton of a cell produces biochemical changes. And so much more is being done across multiple disciplines.. This, I believe is the future of medicine and biomechanics and robotics, etc. etc.

  • @WileytheTeleskiier
    @WileytheTeleskiier 10 лет назад

    more with less!

    • @MaxWill-bt2tk
      @MaxWill-bt2tk 3 месяца назад

      I got a cook book with that title😊

  • @TomaszSzulinski
    @TomaszSzulinski 11 лет назад

    Yes!!!

  • @RosssRoyce
    @RosssRoyce 12 лет назад

    Yes!!!