Guest Blog - Strengthening the "Fragility of Grand Discoveries” With Biomimicry
Guest Blog: Strengthening the “fragility of grand discoveries” with biomimicry
The story of how Velcro came to be has become the stuff of legend. A Swiss electrical engineer named Georges de Mestral went on a hunting trip in the Alps in the early 1940s and noticed how burrs from burdock plants attached to his dog’s fur. He took a closer look, inspiration struck, and the world of textiles has never been the same since.
Would de Mestral have come up with that same idea had he not thought to look a bit closer at the burrs he pulled from his pup’s fur? Would Velcro have ever existed if de Mestral never decided to get a dog (or was more of a cat person)? Would someone else have dreamed up the same concept years later? We’ll never know.
In an essay he wrote for the Powell’s Books blog, author and physicist Leonard Mlodinow muses about what he calls “the fragility of grand discoveries.”
This blog is reprinted in its entirety with permission from the Biomimicry Institute, Biomimicry in Design, February 9, 2016.
About the author:
Erin Connelly is the director of communications and outreach at the Biomimicry Institute, where she helps spread the word about how biomimicry is changing the world.