Title: Michael Collins
1ASPECTS OF DESIGN IN THE NATURAL WORLD
London South Bank University Brunel
University,West London
2Summary
- Two MAJOR themes - Mathematics Perception
- Two ADDITIONAL themes - History Thermodynamics
Plus overheads from various publications
3Activities
- How was this approached?
- Design in Nature Series,WIT Press
- Discussions with senior UK biologists
- Rationale - identification of mainstream themes
- Reading over entire subject range
- Colour Design Conference and
- Special Issue of Journal
4Laws and Perception
- Natural laws hold over cosmos.
- - a regularly- behaved understandable universe
- Laws not just empirical but mathematical (o1,o2)
- In biology, perception of form is also crucial
(o3A,B) - points to Goethe
5Design A
- What do we mean by design? wysiwyg
- Neutral on beliefs - positive or negative (o4)
- Engineering description of design (o5,o6) and
creativity (o7)
6Design B
- Importance of robustness - leading to Robust
Engineering Design (RED) (o8,o9) - Engineering design methods can be applied in
biology (o10,o11)
7History A
- Pythagoras (o12)
- Golden Ratio and Music (o13)
- Golden Ratio,Golden Ellipse,Logarithmic Spiral..
- very interesting - join mathematics
perception
8History B
- Philosophy of mathematics goes back to Plato
- neo-Platonism - Gomatom (o14)
- neo-Platonism - Penrose
- neo-Platonism - Fokas
9History C
- Philosophy of biology goes back to Aristotle
- Aristotle - Gomatom (o15)
- Aristotle - Arber (o16)
- Aristotle - Webster Goodwin (o16B)
10History D
- Mathematical design of Greek theatre at Epidaurus
(o17) - Aesthetically,permanently,touristically
attractive
11Renaissance A
- Re-discovery of Greek knowledge (o18)
- Leonardo da Vinci - the polymath (o19)
- Leonardo da Vinci - his holism (o20)
12Renaissance B
- Ruskin very pro-Gothic (1849-1852)
- The Stones of Venice (o21)
- Ruskin anti-Renaissance architecture (o22,o23)
13Renaissance C
- Ruskin very pro-Gothic (1849-1852)
- The Stones of Venice (o21)
- Ruskin anti-Renaissance architecture (o22,o23)
14T.A.Cook and Spirality A
- Cook spent 20 years (1895-1915) studying
spirality in nature - The Curves of Life - He essentially agreed with Ruskin - subtle
differences were crucial to him (o24,o25) - He was also pro-Gothic (o26)
15T.A.Cook and Spirality B
- He also stressed mathematics by way of Fibonacci
numbers for leaf arrangements (o27) - He described genius as imaginatively creative
- power, able to handle diminutive divergence
from correct formality (o28)
16Conflict between Biology and Thermodynamics
- Darwin, Huxley Kelvin
- on the age of the earth
(o29) - Tyndall Tait
- on the claims of Mayer
vis-a-vis Joule (o30)
17The Laws of Thermodynamics
- First Law of Thermodynamics (o31)
- Second Law of Thermodynamics (o32)
- Entropy (macroscopic,thermal) (o33)
18Free Energy-a crucialthermodynamic parameter for
living systems
- The definition of Free Energy (free enthalpy or
Gibbs function) (o34) - The correspondence between fuels and food (o35)
19The System Conceptin thermodynamics
- Part of the genius of thermodynamics is the
concept of system system boundary - There are three kinds (o36A)
- isolated - no matter or energy can cross
bdry - closed - energy only can cross boundary
- open - both matter and energy can cross
bdary
20Thermodynamic Systems and biology
- closed - the biosphere (o36B)
- of prime importance (Wicken)
- open - living organisms,cells (o36B)
21Shannon entropy
- Entropy defined in o33 macroscopically and
thermally - Boltzmann ,1872, showed entropy can also
- be defined microscopically and statistically
- Shannon ,1948,defined entropy in terms of
information theory - (doubt about this)- (o37) - Tribus ,1961, defining entropy as uncertainty,
developed a full thermodynamic theory (o38)
22Prigogines Thermodynamics
- Far-From-Equilibrium Systems (o39)
- Irreversible Processes and Self-Organization
(o40) - Dissipative Structures (o40)
- All apply to living systems
23Cosmic Evolution A(after Chaisson)
- neo-Darwinism subset of broad evolutionary
scheme (o41) - work of Layzer (1975,etc)
- cosmic expansion.prime mover for.hierarchy of
structures throughout the Universe (o41)
24Cosmic Evolution B
- Graphs of cosmic temperature and information
- with time (Chaisson) (o42)
- 3-D graph of energy and information densities
with time (Ji) (o42) - Similar graphs of Hawking and Goonatilake
25Cosmic Evolution C
- Chaisson uses free energy rate densities to
compare order of structures in Universe (o43) - stars,planets animals,brains,society
- this measure of complexity is increasing sharply
- with time (o43)
- similar graphs of Hawking and Goonatilake
- can this energy/information approach be applied
in design?
26 Biocybernetics of Ji A
- Generic model of machine (o44A)
- Application to living cell (o44A)
- Bhopalator model of living cell (o44B)
27 Biocybernetics of Ji BThe human body
- Piscatawaytor model (o45)
- Four control systems - nervous,circulatory,
endocrine, immune - affect - Macroscopic voluntary bodily motions
intentional microscopic processes in brain - Importance of voluntary control (o45)
28Dissipative structuresand bifurcations
- Jis proposal of space- time- dependent
biochemical structures in cell (o46) - Consistent with dissipative structures of
Prigogine - Focus on calcium and cytoskeleton (o46)
- Bifurcation behaviour towards alternative
states.(o47)
29Morphogenesis and bifurcations
- Webster and Goodwins study on the effect of
calcium variation on cytoskeleton mechanics (o48) - Consistent with Jis focus
- Ruling equations give spontaneous bifurcations
- Wickens similar description (o49)
30Chaos,attractors and pattern formation
- Dissipative structures display bifurcations
- Cascade of bifurcations leads to chaotic
behaviour - Within the chaos a range of preferred steady
states may appear - These are termed attractors in phase-space,which
is the set of variables describing system
behaviour - This can explain pattern formation in biology (
o51 and The Self-Made Tapestry,Philip Ball)
31History and bifurcations
- Recent growth of complexity in the Universe is
- a)within living systems
- b)by living systems-essentially homo
sapiens - Goonatilake terms b) exosomatic
- This growth results in industrial/cultural
advances - Such history may be described as a series of
bifurcations (o52)
32Closure Ahow chaotic is evolution?
- Presentation has shown complexity ,free energy
,dissipative structures all relevant within
Nature - Chaotic behaviour gives alternative states
sensitive to initial conditions so consistent
with natural selection - Attractors means robustness emerges and can
describe morphogenesis and pattern formation - How much can chaos describe evolution?
- Lewin Goodwin (o53),Ball Goodwin (o54)
33Closure Bthe nano-world
- Behaviour at molecular level same in natural and
engineered worlds - Molecular dimensions merge into nanoscale
- where continuum concept breaks down for both
solids fluids (o55) - Mathematical methods must be same for all fields
- For fluids - Lattice Boltzmann/Monte Carlo
- MC invented by Kelvin (o56)
34Closure Cbeauty
- Beauty maths (Fokas) (o57)
- Beauty in spirals (Cook) (o57)
- Beauty in architecture (Ruskin) (o58)
- Beauty,function engineering (French) (o59)
35Closure Dcredits
- Design in Nature Series ,WIT Press (o60)
- Contents ,Volume 2 ,DIN Series (o61)
- Colour Design Conference ,2003, (o62)
- Special Colour Issue of Optics Laser
Technology ,2005
36Closure E
- Many thanks for watching this presentation!
- MWC 25-5-05