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Buckminster Fuller – Building Blocks of the Universe

Buckminster Fuller
Platonic solids
three platonic solids – terrahedron, octahedron and icosahedron

Buckminster Fuller proposed that there are three building blocks of the Universe: the tetrahedron, octahedron and icosahedron are the most important building blocks of nature. Fuller was the first to describe the tetrahedron as the simplest structural system with insideness and outsideness, and it was his most important building block, the form on which the rest of synergetic geometry hinged. The tetrahedron, with its four faces and four vertexes, was the three-dimensional form that could contain the least volume. It was the simplest “system” containing a set of relationships. Regardless of the earlier references to the family of regular polyhedra and their significance in life’s architecture on a moving, spherical earth, humans had latched onto the cube as the main building block of mathematics. For Fuller, the 90 degree angles of the cube were a side effect or “precessional effect” of various processes in a universe of angles, curves and arcs. His cube was inscribed by the duotet, two interpenetrating tetrahedra whose eight outer points met cube’s eight vertices and gave it an inherent stability.

Four hundred years after Durer and Kepler, Buckminster Fuller continued a similar process of experimental observation of structure in three dimensions. Fuller’s approach to design was influenced by his Navy experience. During a long introduction to the design of ships on the sea, Fuller paid attention to designs which contained new angles and curves in order to navigate through a continually shifting, fluid medium. In his earliest writing, a 1928 document titled “Lightful Housing,” he introduced a “Theory of the Spheres.” In this paper he contended, “all matter in unforced state is spheroidal not cubistic, and these spheres are expanding for the life of their existence at a fixed rate.”15 A very different version of this essay appeared in Fuller’s self-published 1928 book titled “4-D Timelock.” For the rest of his life he unraveled this way of looking at the earth from a spherical perspective. Finally in 1975 and 1979 respectively, Fuller released Synergetics and Synergetics 2 presenting the complete system of dynamic geometry from which he derived the geodesic dome, his icosahedral map and his octet truss building system.

For Fuller there were no flat planes. Everything was curved, from space to shape. Everything was in motion and was continually shifting. But the classical shapes remain as guideposts to form found throughout the Universe. His approach the same problems that earlier geometricians and artists tackled by “tiling the plane” or building polyhedra was through the closest packing of spheres. Delineating vector lines within closest packed spheres, Fuller defined the basic polyhedra that could be used as dynamic building blocks on a larger scale.

Closest Packed Spheres and Space-Filling

Like Kepler before him, Fuller was enamored with sphere packing. He generated his vector systems from the closest packing of spheres. Vector lines could be drawn from the center of one sphere to the center of the other. All of the vertices, then, in this closest packed group of unit radius spheres would be found in the center of each sphere at which each vector meets the others. A simple way to visualize this packing formation is to put three spheres close together on the table so that they all touch each other. Where they each touch each other Fuller called “the kissing point of spheres.”

kissing point
Fig. 986.161 Diametric Unity: The vectors of the isotropic vector matrix interconnect the spheric centers of any two tangentially adjacent spheres. The radii of the two spheres meet at the kissing point and are each one-half of the system vector. Unity is plural and at minimum two.
Copyright © 1997 Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller

Drawing a line from the center point of each sphere to the center points of the others, you will inscribe a vector triangle. But that “system” of vector relationships does not have an inside and an outside. If you place a sphere on top, centered on the three spheres and connect the centers of each of the three to the center of the top one, you will have four vertices — a tetrahedron — the simplest “system” with insideness and outsideness. Fuller started with the topology of closest packed spheres to map the vectorial relationships between them. He always worked in three dimensions, never two. Unlike the geometers before him, Fuller did not start with a point, then a line, then a plane to which he then added dimension. He started in the center of the sphere and out in all directions. The lines or vectors represented energy, direction and time.

tetrahelix
tetrahelix

As space-fillers, tetrahedra cannot pack together. They will instead insist on twisting into a “tetrahelix” — a helical structure made of tetrahedrons which expands in either direction. The same could be said for the octahedron if you tried to stack one atop another. In addition, if you truncate each of the four points of a tetrahedron, you will have a beautiful octahedra laying on its side in the middle. But if you pack tetrahedrons and octahedrons together, you can fill space with ease. The presence of 60-degree angles within a lattice of tetrahedrons and octahedrons gives the final structure an inherent cross-bracing in all directions.

All builders know that while cubes fill space perfectly, any cube or square with 90-degree angles must either be made of strong materials or have cross bracing to ensure the building’s structural strength. Fuller’s octet truss system makes the 60-degree angles of cross bracing primary. Any 90-degree angle in Fuller’s system appears only as a side effect, inscribing various vector relationships throughout the isotropic vector matrix (IVM). He called this new, inherently strong space-filling matrix an “octet truss.” Although the octet truss had already been built by Alexander Graham Bell, Fuller’s early investigations left him unaware of Bell’s architectures. He did not know about Bell’s strong, lightweight and beautiful octet truss kites out of wood with metal braces He was not familiar with Bell’s octet truss tetrahedral tower braced together with a custom-designed hub system of metal spheres. Fuller became aware of Bell’s structures well after he had discovered and demonstrated the strength of the octet truss sytem both in theory and in practice. 16a

isotropic vector matrix
Omnidirectional closest packing of spheres defining nodes of the Cuboctahedron
Isotropic Vector Equilibrium
Isotropic Vector Equilibrium

Fuller found also that if an octet space filling truss was built outwardly in successive shellings it would result in a successive series of nested polyhedra, the tetrahedron, octahedron and the cuboctahedron, or “vector equilibrium” (with six square faces and eight triangular faces on its outer surface) replicating the structures of its components on a larger scale. He called this larger trusswork an “isotropic vector matrix” because the angles and strut lengths were everywhere the same.

vector equalibrium
Fig. 222.30 Volume Of Vector Equilibrium: The volume of the vector equilibrium consists of eight tetrahedra and six half-octahedra. Therefore, the volume of the vector equilibrium is exactly twenty.
Copyright © 1997 Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller

Isotropic vector matrixes were known and described well before Fuller named them such. Coxeter published a picture of a tetrahedral octet matrix he called “solid tessellation” in a mathematics publication as early as 1939.16b Matila Ghyka, in his interdisciplinary masterwork of 1946, The Geometry of Art and Life showed a similar image called an “isotropic partition of space by four sets of planes” in a section on closest packing and the cuboctahedron.

Cuboctahedron
Cuboctahedron

Although Fuller was not aware of Coxeter’s solid tesselation, there is evidence that he was familiar with Ghyka’s. So what was so different about Fuller’s isotropic vector matrix? Through it, he introduced this matrix of 60-degree angles as a model of primary coordinate system from which all other systems could be generated. In addition, Fuller attempted to effectively replace the platonic and Archimedean “solids” as vectored “energy systems” and built them with struts with flexible connectors in order to demonstrate how they transform from one shape to another in time.

In a closest packed group of 12 spheres around one, a vector equilibrium can be inscribed. Fuller called his simple vector equilibrium, when made out of flexible hubs and struts, a “jitterbug” because it twisted to exhibit, while in continuous motion, a series of shapes which accommodate and transform into one another. In its most open stage, it is the cuboctahedron. If it is twisted and contracted, it will become an open icosahedron with six struts missing and with one more contraction it will become the octahedron. It can then be folded down further into a tetrahedron and finally to a simple triangle. Then, simply unfold, untwist and the jitterbug pops back to its original shape, the cuboctahedron or, in Fuller’s dynamic system, the Vector Equilibrium.

The key to Fuller’s jitterbug was its ability to embody and demonstrate the “motion” and transformation of polyhedral forms. Fuller’s jitterbug could be considered the first polyhedral model in more than two thousand years of mathematical and structural exploration that can demonstrate the energy characteristics of expansion and contraction. Because of the natural twist, like the spiral of a nautilus shell which draws its form from the mathematical rules of golden proportion, the jitterbug in motion can move through symmetrical forms which, if omnitriangulated internally, will span the oscillating continuum of symmetrical and asymmetrical form.

Fuller insisted that since there were no straight lines, the lines that emerge from the 90 degree angles of the “ghostly cube” are wave forms resembling straight lines. His cube was merely the outer “case” of a negative and one positive tetrahedron — the duotet — which was meant to be seen in motion. An octahedron (the dual of the cube) can be inscribed in the center of the two interpenetrating tetrahedra. Only in this duotet configuration is the cube completely stable with a diagonal edge of one of the tetrahedra at each face. The duotet was known and depicted graphically well before Fuller, however. Pacioli deemed it “raised octahedron” and pictured it in his 1509 treatise, “De Divina Proportione.” Leonardo da Vinci called it the “star tetrahedron” and in the 1600s Kepler gave it its more popular title, “stella octangula.”

Stella Octangula
Stella Octangula

In all of its manifestations, two interpenetrating tetrahedra have represented the most important fact about the tetrahedron — that it is the only regular polyhedron that is its own self-dual with exactly the same number of vertices as faces. Fuller placed his duotet as the energetic corollary to his vector equilibrium and allowed it to replace the cube in his synergetic geometry.

Read more at  http://members.cruzio.com/~devarco/energy.htm

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