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Living nature offers plenty of ‘inventions’ that could serve as prototypes for new technical products. It is the task of biomimetics to abstract these ideas from nature and to implement them technically. But how exactly does that work? And can biomimetics be considered an independent scientific discipline? A new research project at the universities of Rostock and Tübingen is investigating these questions. It is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) with around 500,000 euros.
From bird flight to gecko feet, humans have always been inspired by nature for technical developments. In the 20th century, this has been elevated to a programme under the name of biomimetics, and it is hard to imagine our everyday life without biomimetic products such as the Velcro fastener. From the perspective of the philosophy of science, however, biomimetics has not yet been explored.
Dr. Manfred Drack from the Institute for Evolution and Ecology at the University of Tübingen and Dr. Ludger Jansen from the Institute for Philosophy at the University of Rostock address this research gap and investigate the question of how exactly the transfer of biological knowledge to technical developments works.
The researchers will examine selected biomimetic development projects to see whether common methods and a uniform subject matter can be found in them, which would justify conceiving biomimetics as a unified scientific discipline. In addition, the basic categories identified in the research processes will be formalised based on a philosophical analysis so that a computer can process them.
PD Dr. Ludger Jansen
Institute of Philosophy
University of Rostock
Tel.: +49 381 83-2818 (Secretary)
E-mail:ludger.jansen@uni-rostock.de
Web: https://purl.org/jansen
Dr. Manfred Drack
Institute for Evolution and Biology
Eberhards-Karls-Universität Tübingen
E-mail: manfred.drack@uni-tuebingen.de
Web: https://uni-tuebingen.de/en/148575
http://Website of the project: https://biomimetics.hypotheses.org
For the construction of his flying machine, Otto Lilienthal thoroughly studied the flight of storks, ...
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Dr. Ludger Jansen (pictured) from the Institute of Philosophy at the University of Rostock explores ...
University of Rostock
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