James T. Baldwin
American industrial designer and writer (1933–2018), known as Jay Baldwin — a student of Buckminster Fuller who spent his career popularizing and interpreting Fuller's principles while advancing solar, wind, and appropriate technology.
Baldwin studied under Fuller and carried his design philosophy into a long career of teaching, designing, and writing. He edited the "Soft Technology" and tools sections of the Whole Earth Catalog and its successors, and his book BuckyWorks: Buckminster Fuller's Ideas for Today is among the most accessible accounts of what Fuller's work means in practice. He was a hands-on advocate of doing more with less in real, buildable objects.
Role in Fuller's orbit
Baldwin is a direct student and chief popularizer of Fuller — the person who did the most to translate Fuller's ideas for the appropriate-technology and Whole Earth generations. He worked in the same milieu as Stewart Brand and the dome-and-tools counterculture.
See Also
- Stewart Brand (Stewart Brand) — Whole Earth Catalog founder in the same appropriate-technology world
- BuckyWorks (BuckyWorks) — the accessible introduction to Fuller's ideas Baldwin authored
- Whole Earth / Portola Institute (Whole Earth / Portola Institute) — whose Whole Earth Catalog tools sections he edited
Sources
- James T. Baldwin (source reference) — Zotero People collection (Wikipedia entry)