Outrage as a Cultural Distribution Mechanism
In the spring of 1974, a cooperative of physicians began publicly advocating for the routine clinical use of a procedure that was, at the time, considered by a
Mammalian Biotech
Advanced research at the intersection of artificial intelligence, biological systems, adaptive cognition, and human–machine interaction.
In the spring of 1974, a cooperative of physicians began publicly advocating for the routine clinical use of a procedure that was, at the time, considered by a
Earlier this year, Mammalian Biotech's media unit began production on a documentary short following three operators who are transitioning from conventional animal agriculture to distributed cell
Mammalian Biotech is conducting a limited series of private dining events introducing Pure Culture products in partnership with a small number of chefs and culinary institutions. The series
This letter is addressed to agricultural operators under forty who are currently managing or inheriting operations in conventional animal protein production. We recognize that is a specific audience
Operational notes from the Pure Culture cultivation program. Posted as documentation. No further context is provided. Day 1. Facility orientation completed. Instrument calibration verified. Baseline atmospheric readings within
Every object in your home was extracted. We start with a specification.
Day 847. Unit 12-A. Left rear support at 94% target angle. All four primary growth axes within tolerance.
Earlier this month we launched a billboard campaign across twelve cities. The billboards read: "Industrial slaughter is not tradition. It is logistics." Some people were angry.
The engineering challenge in Form is not the modification. The challenge is consistency at scale across a multi-year growing cycle.
Protein derived from cell cultivation. Produced in distributed facilities. No geographic constraints. No seasonal variation. No supply chain exposure to climate or disease events. Pure Culture is the
Participants responded differently to Form objects once they understood the production process — but not in the way we anticipated.
Every generation inherits a set of practices it finds unremarkable. The next generation finds them baffling. This is not a moral observation. It is a historical one. The