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Everything I Know

Transcripts of Buckminster Fuller's extended 'Everything I Know' lecture sessions, an autobiographical, thinking-out-loud attempt to set down the whole of what he had learned. Across eleven chapters Fuller traces humanity's trial-and-error discovery of operative principles, the unprecedented acceleration of twentieth-century change, and his own disciplines as a comprehensivist working from Universe down to plumbing.

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Everything I Know

Humanity has always been born naked, absolutely helpless, with no experience and therefore absolutely ignorant — and from there, by trial and error, stimulated by designed-in hunger, thirst, and procreative urge, has had to find its way and resolve experience into the discovery of principles that seem operative in our Universe.

"Everything I Know" is a transcribed run of eleven lecture sessions in which Fuller talks his way, autobiographically and in real time, through the whole of what he has learned. It is less a structured treatise than a recorded act of thinking aloud: Fuller repeatedly invites the audience to share "very intimately" the conscious self-disciplines he uses, and circles outward from personal anecdote to cosmic scale and back to concrete engineering.

Structure and method

The transcripts run as Chapters 1 through 11 (plus an index). There is no rigid chapter-by-chapter syllabus; instead Fuller follows a recurring movement — from the largest patterns of Universe down into specific, granular problems, then back out — which he names explicitly in Chapter 6 as the discipline of the comprehensivist. He claims the ability to "plunge in depth" into any subject (he cites spending two years on a mass-production bathroom and the design of toilet bowls) without losing the comprehensive frame he started from, so that he can return "quite rapidly from any subject." The lectures are saturated with personal history: his father's leather-importing business, his daughter Allegra born the year Lindbergh flew, his granddaughter whose first word was "air," his thirty-seven zig-zag circuits of the earth.

Core ideas

  • Trial and error toward operative principles. Fuller's opening premise is that all humanity starts naked, helpless, and ignorant, with "no rulebook," and finds its way only by trial and error — gradually resolving experience into principles that appear to be operative in Universe. He marvels that Hindu and Chinese thinkers were already "thinking very extraordinarily well" five thousand years ago on a tiny fraction of today's information.

  • Unprecedented acceleration. Using the explosion of known chemical substances (roughly a quarter-million entering World War I, a million coming out, ten million by the end of World War II) and his own catalogue of "impossibles" that happened in his lifetime — flight, the North and South Poles, the wireless, the human voice on radio, television, satellites — Fuller argues that humanity is passing through a designed evolutionary transition, like a child issuing from the womb.

  • The redefinition of "natural." Each generation calls "natural" whatever it found on arrival. Fuller refuses the words artificial and unnatural: "if nature permits it, it is natural; if nature doesn't permit it, you can't do it." Unfamiliarity, not nature, is what makes us call a thing artificial. This reframes the generational gap as children being born into a new "natural" that is genuinely unnatural to their elders.

  • The vanity factor. Fuller observes that humans, no sooner than a breakthrough occurs, claim "I knew it all the time." He treats this strange vanity as a designed-in survival trait — without it, the sheer number of mistakes required to learn anything would have left humanity too discouraged to carry on.

  • Scale and human invisibility. He repeatedly resets proportion by invoking the cosmic scale: the Milky Way's hundred billion stars, billions of galaxies, our "rather inferior" Sun, Betelgeuse larger than Earth's orbit — and our own utter invisibility on a negligible planet, a discipline meant to keep human problems "in a little better proportion."

  • From Universe to plumbing. The same comprehensivist who opens on galaxies insists that scientists have never looked at the plumbing — that valuable chemistries nature labored to separate are deliberately recombined in the toilet, that people flush a pint of waste with seven gallons of precious water. The lectures treat sanitation, tolerances, and dwelling design as legitimate frontiers.

Recurring vocabulary

The transcripts are dense with Fuller's signature geometry and design-science vocabulary: Universe (his most-used term), synergetics, vector equilibrium, tensegrity, geodesic, precession, Dymaxion, and his ethic of doing more with less. These appear throughout as the conceptual machinery behind the autobiographical narrative, tying the personal account to his formal geometric and design work.

Significance

"Everything I Know" is the most complete first-person record of Fuller's worldview in his own unedited voice — discursive, anecdotal, and recursive. Its value is as a primary witness to how Fuller thought (the disciplines, the self-corrections, the constant rescaling) rather than as a polished system. It connects his cosmic claims to ordinary objects and his own life, and serves as a Rosetta stone for the more compressed technical language of his books.

See Also

Sources

buckminster-fullerlecture-transcriptpattern-integrityoperative-principlestechnologytrial-and-error