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A Natural History of the Synthetic Future

Synthetic Biology is turning to the living kingdoms for its materials library. No more petrochemicals: instead, pick a feature from an existing organism, locate its DNA code and insert it into a biological chassis. From DIY hacked bacteria to entirely artificial, corporate life-forms, engineered life will compute, produce energy, clean up pollution, make self-healing materials, kill pathogens and even do the housework. Manufacturers will transcend biomimicry, engineering bacteria to secrete keratin for sustainable vacuum cleaner casings; synthesise biodegradable gaskets from abalone shell proteins and fill photocopier toner cartridges with photosensitive E. coli. Meanwhile, we’ll have to add an extra branch to the Tree of Life. The Synthetic Kingdom is part of our new nature.

Biotech promises us control over the natural world, but living machines need controlling. Biology doesn’t respect boundaries or patents. And in simplifying life to its molecular interactions, might we accidently degrade our sense of self? Are promises of sustainability and unparalleled good health seductive enough to accept such compromise?

Credits

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg

Animation by Cath Elliot
littlegiantpictures.co.uk/

The Synthetic Kingdom
© Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg
Design Interactions Royal College of Art 2009
daisyginsberg.com

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  • Mike Westdijk 1 year ago
    Talking about health and sustainability, one could perhaps better take a look at and learn from biology rather than just using biology (i.e., living cells and DNA) as a tool to create solutions.
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  • Uploaded Mon June 22, 2009
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