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- From: autodesk!robertj@uunet.uu.net (Rob Jellinghaus)
- Newsgroups: sci.nanotech
- Subject: Re: Rere:Snowballing tomk
- Message-ID: <Sep.15.16.54.23.1992.22114@planchet.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 15 Sep 92 20:54:24 GMT
- Sender: nanotech@planchet.rutgers.edu
- Organization: Autodesk Inc., Sausalito CA, USA
- Lines: 101
- Approved: nanotech@aramis.rutgers.edu
-
-
- Tom, have you read _Engines of Creation_ or _Unbounding the Future_?
- Much of what I'm about to say is said more eloquently in those books.
- Anyone on sci.nanotech who hasn't read them is missing a fundamental
- base of knowledge about what nanotech advocates are claiming and why.
-
- In article <Sep.8.16.32.21.1992.1046@planchet.rutgers.edu> tomk@netcom.com (Thomas H. Kunich) writes:
- >In article <Aug.31.23.11.27.1992.29492@planchet.rutgers.edu> shearson!snark!pmetzger@uunet.uu.net (Perry E. Metzger) writes:
- >>You seem to forget another point; even an immature nanotechnology will
- >>likely radically alter our lifespans.
- >
- >And how do you arrive at this idea Perry? Aren't you somehow sticking
- >medical science advances in there with nanotechnological advances?
- >(Sort of "And a Miracle Occurs" middle part?)
-
- Many advances in medical science have come about because of improved
- technology. CAT and MRI would be impossible without computers, even
- though computers have nothing to do _per se_ with medical science.
- There is no miracle. If we have tools which can perform surgery at
- the molecular level--tools for which there would be much demand, once
- nanotechnology makes it possible to manufacture them--the range of
- possible treatments and procedures will be enormously expanded.
-
- >>And for those of us who don't like the idea of being caught dying just
- >>a few decades away from nanotechnology, there is always cryonics...
- >
- >What about cryonics?
-
- There is a sizable subset of the nanotech community that believes that
- advanced nanotech (i.e. nanotech that may take many decades to
- develop) will be able to repair widespread, extensive neurological
- damage... the sort of damage that results from cryonic preservation.
- The natural implication is that if you believe nanotechnology is
- possible, and if you believe it will be developed eventually (because
- of all the payoffs, both near-term and long-term), then it is quite
- conceivable that nanotech could improve your chances of being
- reanimated after cryonic treatment.
-
- >>Given the fact that you can construct more assemblers with self
- >>reproduction, why should we be restricted to so few assemblers?
- >
- >If you can't construct a single self replicating machine right now
- >how do you presume to invent such a machine.
-
- What sense does this make? In 1900, I could easily have said, "If you
- can't construct a single spacecraft right now how do you presume to
- invent such a machine." Technological history is filled with truly
- new inventions.
-
- >This has never worked in the past and now we are
- >going to have it happen in an entirely new technology.
-
- Many people in the last few days have pointed out that nanotechnology,
- defined as "control of the structure of matter at a molecular level,"
- is NOT an "entirely new technology". Rather, it is at the center of
- molecular mechanics, biotechnology, computational chemistry, and a
- host of other eminently real-world technologies.
-
- >Show me ANYTHING that could be considered a demonstration of the idea.
-
- What kind of demonstration do you want? Any biotech company--using
- modified biological molecular machinery to produce useful products--
- is an example. Any artificial life program--running artificial
- organisms which can improve their fitness through artificial evolution
- --is another.
-
- >OK, I'll bite. HOW will better assemblers make faster and better
- >computers? You are again simply making an immense leap of faith.
- >Compared to this Joan of Arc was a piker.
-
- The limiting factors in computer speeds are threefold: cycle time,
- amount of processors, and cost of manufacturing. Molecular nano-
- technology could naturally be applied to produce smaller circuit
- elements, reducing cycle time. Likewise, molecular-scale processors
- would be far more ocmpact, increasing the amount of processing power
- per unit of space. And assembler technology could make it much less
- expensive to construct such computers. None of these are leaps of
- faith in the slightest.
-
- >I'm trying to goad people into coming up with practical _now_
- >ideas. Not dreams about what nanotech could conceivably become.
- >No one can predict the future with certainty.
-
- You are goading in the wrong place, then. The real research which
- will lead to nanotechnology is being done inside corporate labs and
- biotech startups the world over, by people who are much too busy
- writing papers and creating new tools to spend much time with sci.
- nanotech. There are journals devoted to molecular-scale technology
- and nanotechnology... if you want practical ideas, look there first.
- sci.nanotech is for informal discussion of these ideas, not for
- formal research publications.
-
- And without dreaming of what's possible, how can you know which way
- to go? Foresight is one of the most vital qualities we can possess,
- if we hope to survive the future.
-
- --
- Rob Jellinghaus | "Next time you see a lie being spread or
- Autodesk, Inc. | a bad decision being made out of sheer
- Internet: robertj@Autodesk.COM | ignorance, pause, and think of hypertext."
- AMIX: RJELLINGHAUS | -- K. Eric Drexler, _Engines of Creation_
-