PERSON
Buckminster Fuller
The architect of Spaceship Earth—inventor of the geodesic dome, coiner of ephemeralization, and the first thinker to insist that humanity already possesses every tool required to make the world work for everyone if only it can supply the comprehensive design intelligence to direct them.
Buckminster Fuller spent a career demonstrating that the most important constraint on civilization is not a shortage of resources but a shortage of design intelligence. The word he coined in 1938 for the governing trend of technology—
ephemeralization—captured the observation that successive generations of technology accomplish the same functions with a diminishing fraction of the material, energy, and specialized labor that earlier generations required. Fuller watched this trend move through metals, then circuits, then telecommunications; he correctly anticipated that it would one day reach the cognitive substrate itself. When
large language models collapsed the
imagination-to-artifact ratio to the width of a conversation, ephemeralization completed its longest arc. His concept of
synergy—behavior of whole systems unpredicted by their parts taken separately—explains precisely what emerges when human judgment and machine generation form a genuine circuit rather than a one-directional flow. And his warning that humanity consistently acquires capability faster than it acquires