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Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels
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Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Biomimicry …is learning from nature

Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions

Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012

Bowine Wijffels

Page 2: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Bowine Wijffels

• Consultant ‘learning for sustainable development’ and ‘environmental education’.

• Trainer and former teacher biology/geography• Specific interest: ‘patterns of interaction’

Page 3: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Real time business challenges The World is changing….• Economic recession and loss of stability• Rapid market changes and quick cycles • Environmental and social instability • Open source, new media, networks and cooperations

Today’s vocabulary… (in respons)Adaptive – Agility – Resilience - Networking

Learning organisation – Interconnection Sustainable development.

Page 4: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Biomimicry = learning from nature

an ecology of mind

1. On a individual level (Biomimicry of behaviour, structure and form).

2. On a level of groups and species (teams, family, colleagues).3. On ecosystem level (organisations, cities, communities).

Page 5: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Ad 1 Fysical and individual (source: biomimicry.org)

…housing

…get a grip

…cleaning a surface

Using effective

tools…

Page 6: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Ants: teamwork in bridging the gap

Birds: temporary and shared leadership

Bee’s: group communication about resources

Ad 2 Coorperation in groups…

Page 7: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Accepted leadership

A leader is accepted by the group when the leader;

• Is smart enough to lead the way.• Is social enough to take care of the individuals in

the group.

Chimpansee politics - Frans de WaalDe natuurlijk leider – Mark van Vugt

Page 8: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Sustainable principles of life…

Basic principles• Life creates conditions for life… • Life develops and adapts.

To understand these principles we need to:

• Accept the idea of interdependancy and see the whole (system).

Page 9: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

System thinking? Observations: • Change one player …and the achievements of the whole team change.• The ‘loss’ of one member of the family … has an impact on all relationships. • Add just a little more fish food …and the pond turns green.• One organ is not functioning …and the whole is sick.

We only know that we are part of a system when things are changing and moving…

Page 10: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Ad 3 learning from natural systems

A variety of simple and complex systems

Page 11: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Characteristics of living (eco) systems

Basic ingredients of systems are; • Elements (physical parts)• Connections (the interactions) • Function (purpose)

A system is more than the sum of the parts; interaction is vital

The system purpose is usually: to sustain or survive (and every function is focussed on that).

If it dies, it loses its system-ness.

Page 12: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Why are natural (eco)systems so different?

De first time the word ecosystem was used by the English botanist A.C. Tansley, in 1935.

Page 13: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Because this is how they operate

1. Optimal use of nearby resources (sun, minerals, water or lack of these resources).

2. External cycli are fully integrated (cycli like: day and night, dry and wet, tide, seasons….).

3. It is stable and responds to external disturbance (stability through diversity and flexibility).

4. No central management but small teams and transparant communication (action and reaction based).

Page 14: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Natural systems are stable because they are resilient

• Engineering (operation) resilience: – The extent to which the system can

respond to changes (back in balance).

• Ecological resilience: – The extent to which the system can

change into another system (new balance).

Page 15: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Living system thinkingCharacteristics• When living systems want to get stronger, they connect to

more living things (diversity). • Living systems grow in chaos and are self organising.• Nature makes its most important connection at root level

(underground).• You can’t change a living system, all you can do is disturb it. • The ‘best’ disturbances challenge the equilibrium and

assumed order of the system.• If we can re-engineer it, it’s probably already dead!

www.tipuake-org.nz

Page 16: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Model for organic leadership and innovative organisations

Page 17: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

7 lessons for leaders in system change

1. To promote system change, foster community and cultivate networks.

2. Work at multiple levels of scale (Oakland strategy)3. Make space for self organisation.4. Seize breakthrough opportunities when they arise.5. Facilitate change (but give up the idea that you can direct

change).6. Assume that change is going to take time.7. Be prepared to be surprised.

www.ecoliteracy.org

Page 18: Biomimicry … is learning from nature Subtopic: learning from relations and interactions Club of Amsterdam 23 februari 2012 Bowine Wijffels.

Related initiativesBlue Economy AllianceThe Natural Step Ellen MacArthur FoundationBiomimicry 3.8C2C

Circle EconomyLiving system thinkingAnecologymind (5th of March)