Years ago I had the pleasure of hearing R. Buckminster Fuller speak several times here in the Bay Area. It was a year or so before the passing of his wife whom he soon followed. “Bucky” - as he was affectionately known by his friends and fans – was a visionary inventor/engineer/architect who is probably best known for his geodesic dome design. He was posthumously recognized for his genius by having the C60 allotrope of carbon named “buckminsterfullerene” since it was structured similarly to Fuller’s revolutionary architecture for his dome.
Buckminsterfullerene molecule
Besides his many inventions and
theories, Bucky left us some wondrous literature – around thirty books! One of my
favorite Bucky quotes is: "If the success or failure of this planet, and
of human beings, depended on how I am and what I do, how would I be? What would I do?"
These are not merely thought provoking
questions asked rhetorically. Bucky’s life was a living response to them. For
the most part, he lived as if the success or failure of the human race was
dependent on how he lived and what he did.
We live in a time when our world would
be better served if more of us lived our lives as if the future depended on us.
Quite often, people rationalize their failure to live responsibly – as if the
future depended upon their actions – telling themselves they are only one
person out of billions. This sort of rationalization serves two masters: the cynic
who is convinced nothing can be done to improve matters and the victim who is
equally convinced they are powerless to change anything. It reeks of
powerlessness.
One thing about Bucky which is less
well- known: he seriously contemplated suicide in mid-life. He had a series of
business failures, an experience known all too well by inventive types whose
ideas are a bit too far ahead of the crowd, had gone bankrupt and lost his
young daughter to polio. He reportedly had an epiphany which caused him to step
back from the brink of taking his own life and embark on what he
called "an experiment” - to discover what a single individual could
contribute to change the world and benefit all humanity. For the next half
century, he lived that experiment.
What if we lived
that experiment each day? What if we asked ourselves, “What can I do today to
benefit humanity?” Instead of wallowing in powerlessness what if we simply did
something every day that contributed to the success of the human species? I guarantee you the world would start looking
better.
Another of my
favorite Bucky quotes is, "I'm
not trying to counsel any of you to do anything really special except to dare
to think, and to dare to go with the truth, and to dare to really love
completely." I will add my own dare, no double dare!
I was personally touched seeing Bucky's voluminous journals this summer at the Whitney and wrote about it here...
http://dougist.com/index.php?p=11
and then wrote about my new found appreciation for Bucky's influence on the iconography of the future...
http://dougist.com/index.php?p=10
John, your article was very thoughtful.
Doug
Posted by: Dougist | September 02, 2008 at 03:50 AM