@bartologonzo

Hi, I'm a biologist who always felt we should follow the patterns in nature to achieve success. Thanks for creating this video, it materialize years of my thoughts in just a few minutes. It's incredibly classy and well made. You're future looks brilliant, keep doing things like this!

@olympus5569

Nature is the future

@ritac9769

I am a synthetic biologist working to develop sustainable technologies using life as the medium. Biomimicry was hugely influential on my personal development as a scientist and designer. This channel is amazing - every video is so well made, well researched, and thoughtful. Keep up the amazing work, the most critical thing right now is a public more educated on these kinds of things!

@embracetheshift2464

This channel is seriously going places man. I am currently working on a video that talks about the Biomimicry of cells, i'll shoot it your way once its done. Keep up the great work man

@asmrxism6957

here after learning about Murray bookchin and social ecology. I think biomimicry is a fascinating concept that should be closely considered as we try to tackle climate change

@hyrunnisa997

wow. I am so glad I found this channel!

@matteodefanti1809

I found your channel two weeks ago and now I'm in love with your videos. Inspiring relaxing and well made. You put my attention on environmental problems that I never thought of and that's a fantastic thing.  Hope to see you with 7 digits on the follower count to inspire more people. Thank you.

@pointsoc

This channel must grow larger. The videos are almost equivalent to professional documentaries.

@rheaallwood7859

We used biomimicry as a design brief in my college. Watching this was super interesting. :)

@OurChangingClimate

Have you heard or seen of any promising examples of Biomimicry? If so, what are they? What makes them compelling? (Also if you have any future video ideas, I would love to hear those as well!)

@ralfsbelohvosciks7466

This channel seems like an industry plant from youtube, the production value is so good

@aspenricca

this channel is amazing! I learned so much!!

@Officernoob

Two years later, studying anatomy.  I am reminded of this video.  It gave me my first look into the structure of biology and how the form usually indicates its function.

@carlosandresrubio3033

I never though before about biomimicry in relationships and social movements, but it makes so much sense

@Gd-hm8mp

I'm DYING to learn this discipline but I'm just 16 and not in a not very developed country so it has been close to impossible to learn, but I'll do it somehow. I literally won't stop browsing and learning until I know how to contribute and help make an impact.

@foscorsohil8940

I have no idea why your channel is not hitting big bro. Your content is top notch.

@shredded_lettuce

I know this video is multiple years old by now, but it is really good. Some of what you said reminds me of Murray Bookchin's writing in his essay "Ecology and Revolutionary Thought" which I'd highly recommend. Just as liberatory movements of the past were influenced by the scientific thought and advancements of their day (the era of the French Revolution being influenced by advances in mechanics and mathematics, Marx being influenced by advances in evolutionary and biological science), so too should our movements take influence from ecology as Adrienne Marie Brown points out.

It also ended up being a chapter in his book Post-Scarcity Anarchism, which has some pretty mind blowing insights in it that are still relevant for revolutionary movements of today. Can't recommend it enough for people of every tendency.

@DevjiWarrior12

We need more of this!!

@chad9971

The family and democracy one really hit at home. Wow.

@spikenomoon

You see the overwhelming complexity of nature you recognize that at the smallest level it all has to be brought into existence at the same time a cell must have all its parts at the same moment to become a cell which is more complex than a city during rush hour. And you still refuse to see it had to be created there is a designer behind everything. Massive amounts of digital coding for just a single cell.