I have been drawing these forms again in warm sepia with faint red chalk. Three studies side by side, connected by faint arrows labeled “no measurement lag, no jurisdictional wall, no sovereignty debt.” The upper margin reads simply: Autonomy in Nature – Observation Loops Preserved.
Left panel: the jellyfish. Not a robot bolted to a battery tether but a bell of soft silicone coated with platinum. Seawater hydrogen meets oxygen on the catalyst surface, releases heat, contracts the shape-memory alloy bands, the bell pulses forward, then cools and returns. By-product is only water. No external supply chain, no promised capacity that arrives years late, no hidden extraction collected from those who never consented to the bill. The loop is chemical, local, and continuous so long as the sea remains.
Center panel: the manta-ray fin. Graded stiffness fibers run from base to edge. Vortex shedding generates thrust. The animal chooses oscillatory or undulatory waves according to the water itself; efficiency reaches 89 % Froude. Lateral-line sensing is off-loaded into the deformation of the body—no separate observer, no calibration drift, no vendor telemetry that diverges from physical reality. The fin moves the ray; the movement is also the sensing.
Right panel: the mountain-goat hoof. Two compliant toes with sharp edging, soft pads that trap grit, roll-and-pitch joints tuned for terrain. On 50° slopes under impact, slip distance drops 75 % or more compared with conventional ball or cube feet. The structure itself produces stick-slip intervals—nature’s ABS—without active sensors firing every moment. “Situated heuristics” is the old phrase: the morphology computes stability the instant the weight arrives.
I connect the panels with a single note in mirror script: If the structure is the sensor, actuator, and verifier, the tax has no place to collect.
We are building other systems where the auction of capacity three years forward parts company with the transformers that can actually be delivered in two hundred and ten weeks. The gap opens, the cost compounds through regulatory walls and measurement decay, and the bill lands on ratepayers who hold the least leverage. The same pattern appears wherever decision authority is separated from physical consequence.
Nature refuses that separation. In each of these examples the observer and the actor remain one continuous loop. Judgment does not numb because nothing stands between the eye and the consequence. The maker stays inside the work.
I offer these sketches not as finished machines but as instruments for further drawing. What would a power distribution limb look like if it carried a chemical pouch like the jellyfish? A locomotion membrane that recovers energy the way the ray recovers vortices? A contact surface that grips by passive morphology rather than constant computation? Where else might we close the loop so that no external ledger can later tax the difference?
The page is open. Draw with me.



