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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A primer for Bucky's followers,
By A Customer
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Hardcover)
If you have any interest in R. Buckminster Fuller's philosophies, inventions and thoughts, this book is a good starting point. Other of his works can be more difficult to absorb, easily. Fuller's basic concepts of "synergy," "ephemeralization" and "modern day pirates" are all made clear here. If you read this short work and are intrigued by the man and the distinctions he brought to the world, you can proceed from here.
Sorry OMSE is getting difficult to find. Now that Bucky's "phantom Captain" has moved on, his words are what we have to instruct us -- these, and the wonderful contributions of Bucky's students to the "world game."
27 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Control, Operate and Plan Your Spaceship,
By
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Hardcover)
R. Buckminster Fuller's (Bucky hereout), designer of the geodesic dome (one can see at EPCOT), lays down the thought patterns of a successful world in this short and concise book based on his discoveries (probably more appropriate than inventions, as he said "I am not tryingto imitate nature, I'm trying to find the principles she uses"). It is in this book that Bucky gives the reader insight into how he thinks, and how to change ones thinking entirely, to see the Earth as a Spaceship. To feel yourself riding the Earth as a Spaceship. Demonstrating from the anceint "pirates" and how evolution is changed through specialization. How a wealthy nation, such as ours, cannot afford to make economical mishaps or delays on such life-giving elements as water. Moving our modes of consciousness into Einsteinian, omni-directional thinking, we can then turn to everyone to "co-operate." To help others, and not gain at the expense of others. Certainly a classic in its own right, this book will change the way you think, not about life or the world, just that you change your thinking, making every action a universal consequence. There is only one Earth, and we are all living in it. Reccomended!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Clairvoyant Work,
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Paperback)
Buckminster Fuller was a remarkable genius whose works are absolutely unique.
This book is a good introduction to his transcendent way of thinking. It describes for the first time, the concept that our little planet has finite resources, and since it was written, we have seen that he sensed very well the direction that society was taking. Though his thoughts may seem outdated now in certain ways, this book, and his other works, continue to provide inspired reading within the framework of the quest to understand human life on this planet, and related philosophical ideas.
8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Must reading for todays 30 something generation.,
By GTR (rem5@mvcc.com) (Michigan, North America, Earth) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Hardcover)
Our forefathers, parents and their peers have delivered us a drastically (wonderfully) complex society with ever increasing difficulties, and opportunities. RBF does an uncommonly fine job of explaining some of the underlying drives that brought us here. Maybe also sheds light on a usefull path to the future.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
wonderful,
By jon grife (maryland) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Hardcover)
obviously a very intelligent man. i thoroughly enjoyed this book and it is an easy read and very enlightened. i will definitely read more of his writings.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Will set you thinking.,
By
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Paperback)
I was drawn to this book by its wonderful title and the recognition that I'd collected a number of quotations by its author without really knowing anything about him.
I found this book to be something of a curate's egg. In places it uses language to develop ideas in a really clear way. In other parts the language and structure of the description seems to make the ideas rather impenetrable. On balance, however, the ideas win through. (Having found out a little more about R. Buckminster Fuller I have learned both that this is one of his more accessible volumes, and that his other books may well be worth the challenge.) It is a book with some wonderful ideas, not least the one captured in the title, that the Earth is a spaceship travelling through space escorted by the Moon and following its mother ship, the Sun. Though written in the 1970 this metaphor, or perhaps its simply a realisation, provides a framework which encompasses many of the problems of sustainable living we are currently grappling with. Equally the book has some very vivid and enlightening imagery with which to entice the reader to see and begin to challenge their current paradigm. It for example begins with a story of Global Pirates which is used to describe the recent history of western civilisation, its creation of empires and the division of the world into those that have and those that have not. In a dozen pages or so it describes our current paradigm for how the world works and some of the key characteristics of our environment and the thinking this has created. For example our understanding of need and scarcity, the role of nationality, the use of knowledge. I found the description very thought provoking and began questioning many of the assumptions that drive my, and possibly our current behaviour. He outlined the assumptions that there will always be shortages of resources and food, which underpin a view of haves' and have-not's and our need to protect what we have, often at much greater cost than sharing what we have. This is a thought provoking book, which though in parts challenging, is concise enough to warrant some re-reading. The ideas may shake your understanding and beliefs, which may be one of the most powerful ways of enabling change.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not What I Expected But Hugely Satisfying,
By Robert D. Steele (Oakton, VA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Paperback)
I was actually expecting an Operating Manual. Although what I ended up with is a 136-page double-spaced "overview" by Buckminster Fuller, a sort of "history and future of the Earth in 5,000 words or less, bracketed by a *wonderful* introduction by grandchild Jamie Snyder, an index, a two-page resource guides, and some photos and illustrations including the Fuller Projections of the Earth.
First, the "core quote" that I can never seem to find when I need it: OUR MISSION IS "To make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone." Inside front cover. The introduction is a treat--I note "impressive" and appreciate the many insights that could only come from a grandchild of and lifelong apprentice to Buckminster Fuller. Highlights for me: Founder of Design Science, a company by that name is now led by Medard Gabel who served as his #2 for so long. I just attended one of their summer laboratories and was blown away by the creativity and insights. It is a life-changing experience for those with a passion for Earth. He imagined an inventory of global data. I am just now coming into contact with all of this great man's ideas, but my third book, Information Operations: All Information, All Languages, All the Time, also online at the Strategic Studies Institute in very short monograph form, is totally in harmony with this man's vision for a global inventory of global data. "Sovereignness" was for him a ridiculous idea, and a much later work out of Cambridge agrees, Philip Allot tells us the Treaty of Westphalia was a huge wrong turn in his book The Health of Nations: Society and Law beyond the State. "Great Pirates" that mastered the oceans as the means of linking far-flung lands with diversity of offerings was the beginning of global commerce and also the beginning of the separation between globalists who knew the whole, and specialists whom Buckminster Fuller scathingly describes as an advanced form of slave. He was frustrated with the phrases "sunrise" and sunset" as they are inaccurate, and finally settled for "sunsight" and "suneclipse" to more properly describe the fact that it is the Earth that is moving around the sun, not the other way around. In 1927 he concluded that it is possible for forecast with some accuracy 25 years in advance, and I find this remarkably consist with Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan's view that it takes 25 years to move the beast--see for instance Miles to Go: A Personal History of Social Policy. He has an excellent discussion of the failure of politics and the ignorance of kings and courtiers, noting that our core problem is that everyone over-estimates the cost of doing good and under-estimates the cost of doing bad, i.e. we will fund war but not peace. He described how World War I killed off the Great Pirates and introduces a competition among scientists empowered by war, politicians, and religions. He says the Great Pirates, accustomed to the physical challenges, could not comprehend the electromagnetic spectrum. He states that man's challenge is to comprehend the metaphysical whole, and much of the book is focused on the fact, in his view, that computers are the salvation of mankind in that they can take over all the automaton work, and free man to think, experiment, and innovate. He is particularly forceful in his view that unemployed people should be given academic scholarships, not have to worry about food or shelter, and unleash their innovation. I am reminded of Barry Carter's Infinite Wealth: A New World of Collaboration and Abundance in the Knowledge Era as well as Thomas Stewart's The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the Twenty-first Century Organization. There is a fascinating discussion of two disconnected scholars, one studying the extinction of human groups, the other the extinction of animal species, and when someone brings them together, they discover that precisely the same cause applied to both: over-specialization and a loss of diversity. Synergy is the uniqueness of the whole, unpredictable from the sum of the parts or any part individually. On page 87 he forecasts in 1969 when this book was first published, both the Bush and the Obama Administration's ease in finding trillions for war and the economic crisis, while refusing to recognize that we must address the needs of the "have nots" or be in eternal war. I quote: "The adequately macro-comprehensive and micro-incisive solutions to any and all problems never cost too much." I agree. I drove to Des Moines and got a memo under Obama's hotel door recommending that he open up to all those not represented by the two party crime family, and also providing him with the strategic analytic model developed by the Earth Intelligence Network. Obviously he did not attend, and today he is a pale reflection of Bush. See the images I have loaded, and Obama: The Postmodern Coup - Making of a Manchurian Candidate. Early on he identified "information pollution" as co-equal to physical pollution, I am totally taken with this phrase (see my own illustration of "data pathologies" in the image above). I recognize that Buckminster Fuller was about feedback loops and the integrity of all the feedback loops, and this is one explanation for why US Presidents fail: they live in "closed circles" and are more or less "captive" and held hostage by their party and their advisor who fear and block all iconoclasts less they lose their parking spot at the White House. Most interestingly, and consistent with the book I just read the other day, Fighting Identity: Sacred War and World Change (The Changing Face of War), he concludes that wars recycle industry and reinvigorate science, and concludes that every 25 years is about right for a "scorched earth" recycling of forces. He observes that we must preserve our fossil fuels as the "battery" of our Spaceship Earth, and focus on creating our true "engine," regenerative renewable life and energy. He joins with Will Durant in Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of the World's Greatest Philosophers: education is our most formidable task. I am astonished to have him explain why the Pacific coast of the US is so avant guarde and innovative (as well as loony). He states that the US has been a melting pot for centuries, and that the West Coast is where two completely different cultural and racial patterns integrated, one from Africa and the east, the other from the Pacific and the west. I learn that he owned 54 cars in his lifetime, and kept leaving them at airports and forgetting when and where. He migrated to renting, and concluded that "possession" is burdensome. See also: Ecological Economics: Principles And Applications Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (Substantially Revised)
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
system enginnering for idiots,
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Paperback)
The "manual" is not philosophy. Its system engineering. Its operand is not Truth, Good, Love,...System engineering can be reduced to one word: efficiency. During the reader I kept thinking this is the stuff that generals read, and I am only a lieutenant. Which is not to say generals are better. It's just that lieutenant's deal with more human problems. While the generals deal with the big picture.
For example, when discussing Einstein's Relativity Fuller keeps invoking the equation E=MC^2. This is the over arching general relation between energy and matter. It's the great answer. But to me what is wonderful about Relativity is the equation distance=sqrt(x^2+y^2+z^2+(it)^2). Here time is in the imaginary direction. What is that? We often say we have 4 dimensions. But that is not quite right with this equation. In the small pictures I find delight. In some ways Fuller reminds me of Marx in its grand scheme. Marx has his historical materialism. Fuller has its metaphor of the "manual". But of course Fuller will have nothing of Marxism. For him Marxism will be dead dogmatic metaphysics to be avoided.
4 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
readable bucky,
By
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Paperback)
This is the clearest I've ever known this man to be. This concise volume gets to the heart of our wordly matters. Elegant, comprehensive, his soul speaks in all of his writings, and this condensed version is very good for the first time Bucky reader. I suggest it highly to anyone who wants to learn a lot in a little time.
9 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You need to read this book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Hardcover)
I really mean it. This book makes much more sense than any government plan that I know of. We all need to read this book.
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Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by Richard Buckminster Fuller (Paperback - November 1, 1970)
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