The description of the dictionary and instructions for its use are divided into the following sections: Rationale; Captions; Citations; Cross-References; Scope; File Indicators; Tomographic Effect;
Enter with Your Word: Exit with Fuller’s.
The design of the dictionary derives from the assumption that Fuller s idiosyncratic style, difficult syntax, and predilection for oral discourse make his message not easily accessible to the average reader. He has a penchant for juggling several themes at once in an interwoven tapestry of exposition. Even his most terse and pithy statements benefit from being read in context. Sometimes an extended metaphor may take him pages to complete while he strings together a provocative pattern of digressions and observations.
For example: “Time is an invention.” Certainly this thought is an arresting one. It merits being abstracted for comparison with other Fullerian inventions. But to get the authors full philosophic intent it must be read in context where the dictionary file card indicates it may be found, at both Twelve Universal Degrees of Freedom, 29 May 1972, and Timeless, 1 April 1972.
Thus the rationale of the file is to provide the reader with both the short focus on the isolated aphoristic net statementor definition as well as the full context from which the word or phrase was abstracted. At the price of redundancy, the dictionary affords both.
Letter to Dale Klaus: On the ninth of February, 1970, Fuller wrote a letter to his administrative assistant at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, which read in part:
Dale:
Please arrange with Constance Abernethy [a free-lance editor in New York] to have an exhaustively cross-referenced, alphabetically coded, first-word indexing of my topical concept files upon which she has been working for several years. I feel it imperative for the World Game computerization of the scenario strategies that this work be completed while I am as yet alive and able to supervise its insinuation into the total playing and to be able to do so at the outset before lines of alternative and less alternative strategems have been hardenedwhich may preclude the ready insinuation into the grand strategy of the insights and concepts which I have been employing successfully over the years. …I want you also to study the means…to package up all the concepts for quick retrieval printouts to save me from a fantastic magnitude of repetitive discourse and writing.
Commencing exploration: The best way to judge an atlas is by looking up your hometown or some place you are familiar with. What are some phrases that come to mind when you think of Buckminster Fuller? Such phrases or keywords should lead you to main entries or a choice of cross-references.
If nothing in particular comes to mind, try starting in at any of the following:
Starting with Universe
Identity
Technocracy
Social Sciences: Analogue to Physical
Sciences
Games
Sex
Dreams
Prognostications about Future of Man
Artist
Walking
At the top left-hand corner of every dictionary entry, and above the underlined caption, is the phrase “RBF DEFINITIONS.”[^18] The caption itself, whether a word or a phrase or a clause, is always underlined. And the caption is invariably in Fullers own language wherever it is followed by an excerpted text. Captions which are not representative of Fullers vocabulary are employed only for purposes of cross-reference.
Citations are listed at the bottom line or last two lines of the file-card entry. They are from both published and unpublished sources. Published sources list the title of the volume in capital letters, the page number or numbers, and the year of publication. Only a very few unpublished sources are undated; most unpublished citations provide month, day, and year as well as a geographical location. One of the purposes of the precise dating of citations is not only to list them in proper order for cross-reference but to provide a documentation of the evolutions and refinements of Fullers phraseology of his concepts over a period of many years.
The major published sources for citations in this dictionary are the two volumes Synergetics and Synergetics 2 published by Macmillan in 1975 and 1979; in these cases, citations are to section number rather than page number. In many cases the cited text will have preceded or anticipated the text of the books as finally published; in these cases section numbers have been provided retrospectively.
Synergetics 2 is sometimes referred to as “Synergetics, 2nd. ed.” Section numbers cited in italics (e.g., Sec. 100.020) or preceded by “s” (e.g., Sec. si00.020) also refer to Synergetics 2. The abbreviation “I & I” stands for Ideas and Integrities; “U or O” stands for Utopia or Oblivion. Citations such as these appearing in IBM typeface were prepared specially for the Garland edition of the dictionary.
There are three types of cross-references indicated by a number in parentheses in the upper right-hand corner of the file entry: primary reference (1); secondary reference (2); and third-level reference (3). An effort has been made to provide cross-references that are extensive if not exhaustive. However, some entries will have no cross-references, some will have only primary references, many will have both primary and secondary references, and only major subjects will be recapitulated with third-level references. Examples are as follows:
Primary references
(1)
[Membrane:]
See Diaphragming
Invisible Trampoline
Occulting Membranes
Omnidirectional Shutterable Sieve Monometric Bubble Skins
Electromagnetic Membrane
All entries under each cross-reference refer to the caption Membrane.
Sweepout: (1)
See Ecology
Deployment: Mans Increasing Deployment Pattern
Human Sense Ranging & Information Gathering
Locomotion: Radius of Mans Locomotion
Mans Universe Penetrations
Mans Degrees of Freedom of Action
Outreach
Radial Reach
Reachability Range
Science-Technology-Industry-Economics-Politics Sequence
Travel in a Human Lifetime
All entries under each cross-reference refer to the caption Sweepout.
Secondary references
[Membrane:]{.underline} (2)
See Bubbles, (2)
Domains of Actions, 21 Dec 1971
Privacy, 22 Apr
Only the specific entry cited in the cross-reference refers to the caption Membrane.
When an asterisk (*) appears following a citation in the listing of secondary references, it means that you need not bother to look it up in its primary location, as that particular
reference has already been abstracted and retyped for inclusion (in proper chronological sequence) among the subject captions in the upper left-hand corner.
Third-level references
Cosmic: Cosmos: Cosmology:
See Cosm
Cosmetry
Cosmic Accounting
Cosmically Bankrupt
Cosmic Bridge
Cosmic Coherence
Cosmic Communication Circuits
Cosmic Complementary…
(3)
The third-level cross-reference card recapitulates all the subordinate captions under the major topic.
The editor has attempted to be highly selective and discriminating in compiling this dictionary. Fullers vocabulary is unconventional but consistent, in both its employment of invented words and its use of familiar words in a special way. Wherever possible both the most concise and the most all-embracing DEFINITIONS are presented, always in the authors own words.
There are two main classes of entries (intermingled by alphabetical accident):
DEFINITIONS: The DEFINITIONS are explicit statements of what RBF means by each word he uses. Some words in the Fuller litany are limited to the most graphic examples. In only a few categories does the file attempt to be exhaustive, mostly with abstract or philosophical concepts. In some cases there appears a fairly exhaustive record of the chronological evolution of the authors phraseology.
Metaphors: Sequences: “Metaphors” and “sequences” are the terms used to describe the many frequently recurring narrative passages employed primarily in RBFs oral discourse. These are captioned and indexed under a selected salient phrase, all of which are recapitulated under the file indicator Sequences. Sometimes as many as a half-dozen different versions of the same theme are included in the files where there appear to be significant variations.
The file indicators comprise a virtual fourth level of cross-references in an effort to make every aspect of Fullers language available to the reader for easy access. See page xiii 4 of this volume for a list of the principal file indicators with page numbers.
To illustrate how the Dictionary allows for exploration of the full context of an entry, one of the file entries for Periodic Experience is reproduced below. The words for which there are cross-references have been italicized in this example and references suggesting further planes of meaning have been added vertically.
Periodic Experience: (1)
“Mathematical concepts of group phenomena may be acquired in principle by the willingness (subjectively initiated) of the individual to be governed by the integrity of progressive conceptioning principlethe objective synchronizations are implicit and unavoidable competence and comprehensive, realizable design will result. Let us pursue further the conceptioning in specifics of group principle.
“It is not difficult to understand that the trends to synchronization by harmonic interval of one collection of events can seemingly and sumtotally create an aspect of such superficial incongruity in respect to the sumtotal collected harmonic events of other phases of functional disposition, of the differentiable Universe, as to predispose us to assume that there might never be synchronization of one major collection with another. We obviously incline to this predisposition by virtue of the persistence of the familiar in our own environmental close-upthought, which causes the dynamic interpenetrations to appear as a static, rather than as a periodic-continuity environment reality.
- Cite TOTAL THINKING, I & I. pp. 237–238, May 1949
Enter with Exit with
Helicopter Sky Tug
Artificial Intelligence No Mechanical Mind
Hell Ultimate Entropy
Infinity Nothingness
Politics Social Economics
Words Unitary Communications Tools
Amphibious Omnimedium Transport