Your NameOllie Cotsaftis
Email AddressEmail hidden; Javascript is required.
Cohort AssignmentAustralia Online, Winter-Spring 2024
1. What do you see as your primary work at this stage of your life?

My research on 'designing conditions for coexistence', which translates into the design of new regenerative materials for design and manufacturing.

2. What role do you see as yours to play?

Learning through doing, unlocking potentials, relationship building, advocacy and engagement, showcasing new knowledge and possibilities through practice

3. What goals or aims do you have in regard to the above?

Showcasing that an alternative material palette is possible

4. Where do you feel your next arenas for personal growth are?

Learning how to be more present (I live in the future a lot)

5. And for professional growth?

The gathering part of leadership (feel I have the guiding/visioning part covered)

6. What have you invested in to get you where you are?

I'm genuinely enjoying what I do and I don't think I could do anything else so it doesn't feel like an 'investment'. Feels like I spent the last 25/30 years becoming who I was supposed to be, if that makes sense.

7. What fields of learning and which thinkers have been important in your life?

My work sits at the intersection of design, biology and entrepreneurship — mainly through research and innovation (academia and industry). I'm a big fan of Quentin Meillasoux's speculative materialism philosophy: "If everything is contingent, things do not have to be the way they are". Meaning that radical innovation is possible. I've spent quite a bit of time with Michel Foucault's thinking on alternatives as well (or heterotopias). I find Latour's critique of technosolutionism and Jakob von Uexküll's concept of the 'Umwelt' very interesting.

8. Can you frame your philosophy or cosmology of life? What role(s) do humans play in it?

Life is rare, and thus precious. All life, human and nonhuman, forms a single, diverse living system on Earth (very rationally, life may also exist elsewhere). Contemporary issues started when humans disconnected from this web of life. I am neither religious nor dogmatically rational. 'Energy' is everywhere and perhaps we should simply admit that we do not have all the answers — probably never will. Am I a stoic? Perhaps. A respectful epicurean, most likely.

Date CreatedJuly 11, 2024