The impression I received from Jane Goodall's work is the suggestion to re-examine human's connection with speciation, and how our gradual emergence from speciation as the dominant population only from the random chance such as smashing two rocks together, which chimpanzees and many primates are more than capable of performing. One example is the right page above, where the human and chimpanzee roles are interchanged, with the lab space inside a captivity space, while the chimpanzees are free to roam around the lab observing the occupants.
Theoretical physicists fascinate me with the ability to derive, with logic, everything we know about the universe from planet earth. Isaac Newton calculated the mass of every terrestrial body in the solar system without ever leaving England. Steven Hawkings is the embodiment of this idea in extreme form, working out that the universe can be modeled with 11 dimensions from a wheelchair. I have tried to create a lab space from where he can observe a very large proportion of the universe without raising his head, which he can't do anyway. Above is the concept of Steven Hawkings sitting in the centre of a radio antenna, where he can receive the data (and radiation) which is equivalent to a much larger area from one place.
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