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Barbara Mazzolai is a biologist with a PhD in Micro-Engineering and the Director of the Bioinspired Soft Robotics and Associate Director for Robotics at the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, in Genoa. As part of the prestigious European FET (Future and Emerging Technologies) programme, which sponsors the most visionary research ideas, she has coordinated the project that has led to the realisation of the Plantoid, the world’s first robot inspired by the roots of plants, with uses ranging from space exploration to micro-surgery, to environment monitoring. In 2015, Robohub, the largest international scientific community of robotics experts, ranked her as one of the 25 most brilliant women in the international field of robotics. Her first book, La natura geniale (The Genius of Nature) was published by Longanesi in 2019 and sold to Japan/Hakuyo-sha.
How and why plants are going to change (and save) our planet.
A ‘green’, innovative essay by the manager of the interdisciplinary project that created the world’s first plant-inspired robot, which features at the heart of Stefano Mancuso’s bestseller, Plant Revolution.
The scientist who invented the first robot inspired by plants relates the incredible meeting between biology and technology that is rewriting our future and perhaps even our very survival as a species. From robotics for nature by nature.
English sample available
Written from inside one of the planet’s most avant-garde scientific laboratories, Barbara Mazzolai’s The Genius of Nature tells us how science is trying to discover Nature’s hidden secrets and about the meeting between biology and technology that’s taking place, and which is destined to rewrite the future of our species.
What can plants teach us? Which of their secrets could help us build a better future, less gloomy than the one we are now beginning to glimpse? Will technology ever be able to reproduce the hidden, clean power of the plant world? The answer to all these questions lies in the pioneering work of the woman who invented the first ever robot inspired by the plant world. Perfectly adapted to their habitat, plants represent an evolutionary alternative that’s practically a mirror image of that of the animal world: while humans and animals have evolved by prioritising traits linked to movement and speed, it is slowness that’s at the heart of the plant world’s resilience. If, until yesterday, we had no doubt which of the two strategies was the most successful, nowadays the odd doubt does arise, triggered by the global ecological crisis we have unleashed.
From her extraordinary viewpoint as a key player in the ongoing bio-technological revolution, with scientific rigour and excellent communication skills, Mazzolai offers inspiration and enlightening thoughts concerning the present and future of the “blue planet”.
pp.192
Without plants there is no oxygen or water. Without plants no life is possible. Without plants there can be no future for Planet Earth.
The visionary scientist of biorobotics takes us across the border between biology and robotics and tells us all we are learning and how much we can still learn from the ingenuity of Nature.
English sample available
Partial Translation cost supported by SEPS https://www.seps.it/en
Over millions of years, plants have “engineered” the Earth, turning it into a paradise. Without plants, our blue planet would be an inhospitable, fiery-red rock like Mars. Then where is the sense in the battle against vegetation man has been waging for years? We must open our eyes and see the extraordinary wealth Nature represents for our survival and our development as a species. And we can only do so by studying it and learning from it, for example, in the field of energy, from the way it adapts to the most extreme conditions, by monitoring the environment and exploring new planets.
pp.224
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