PRESS RELEASE: MAY 8, 2006
Nanotechnology Expert Analysis: Huge Impacts from Tiny Tech
Center for Responsible Nanotechnology announces new essays from leading thinkers
NEW YORK, NY - May 8, 2006 - The Center for Responsible Nanotechnology (CRN)
today announced the continuation
of its first series of original essays in which industry experts predict profound
impacts of nanotechnology
on society.
Eleven new articles
by members of CRN's
Global Task Force
appear in the latest
issue of the journal
Nanotechnology Perceptions
, published today, complementing the previous issue's collection. Covering
topics from commerce to
criminology, from ethics to economics, and from our
remote past to our distant future, this new collection
illustrates the profound
transformation that nanotechnology will have on every aspect of human society.
Ray Kurzweil, renowned inventor, entrepreneur, and
best-selling author, explained, "As the pace of
technological advancement
rapidly accelerates, it becomes increasingly important to promote knowledgeable
and
insightful discussion of both promise and peril. I'm very pleased to take
part in this effort by including my
own essay, and by hosting discussion of
these essays on the 'MindX' discussion board at
KurzweilAI.net
."
Nanotechnology Perceptions
is a peer-reviewed academic journal of the
Collegium Basilea in Basel, Switzerland. "We jumped at the
chance to publish the
CRN Task Force essays," said Jeremy Ramsden, editor-in-chief of the journal.
"To
us, these articles represent world-class thinking about some of the most
important challenges that
human society will ever face."
In
August 2005,
the Center for
Responsible Nanotechnology, a non-profit research and advocacy organization,
formed its Global
Task Force to study the societal implications of molecular manufacturing, an advanced form of
nanotechnology.
Bringing together a diverse group of world-class experts from
multiple disciplines, CRN is spearheading an
historic, collaborative effort to
develop comprehensive recommendations for the safe and responsible use of
this
rapidly emerging technology.
"This outstanding compilation of 22 essays
describes some of the major challenges posed by
nanotechnology," said Mike
Treder, executive director of CRN. "However, the collection also makes
it clear
that we have only scratched the surface of the risks, challenges, and
opportunities associated with
molecular manufacturing."
Like electricity or computers before it, nanotechnology will bring greatly
improved efficiency and
productivity in many areas of human endeavor. In its
mature form, known as molecular manufacturing, it will
have significant impact on almost all industries and all parts of
society. Personal nanofactories may offer
better built, longer lasting, cleaner,
safer, and smarter products for the home, for communications, for
medicine, for
transportation, for agriculture, and for industry in general.
However, as a general-purpose technology, molecular
manufacturing will be dual-use, meaning that in addition
to its civilian
applications, it will have military uses as well - making far more powerful
weapons and tools
of surveillance. Thus, it represents not only wonderful
benefits for humanity, but also grave risks.
"Ongoing work toward molecular manufacturing is advancing
rapidly in several fields," said Chris
Phoenix, CRN's director of research. "These 22 essays examine many of the radical changes that
molecular manufacturing will bring to society.
We hope this collection challenges our readers as much as it
informs them. Not
much time is left to find wise solutions."
The CRN Task Force essays have been posted online at
KurzweilAI.net
and
Wise-Nano.org
. Most essays are available for publishing or
reprint under Gnu Free Documentation License (GFDL). The second
group of essays
are:
-
"Nanoethics and Technological Revolutions: A Precis" - Nick Bostrom
-
"From The Enlightenment to N-Lightenment" - Michael Buerger
-
"What Price Freedom?" - Robert A. Freitas Jr.*
-
"The (Needed) New Economics of Abundance" - Steve Burgess
-
"Economic Impact of the Personal Nanofactory" - Robert A. Freitas Jr.*
-
"Corporate Cornucopia: Examining the Special Implications of
Commercial MNT Development" -
Michael Vassar
-
"Molecular Manufacturing and the Developing World: Looking to Nanotechnology for Answers" -
Don Maclurcan
-
"Considering Military and Ethical Implications of
Nanofactory-level Nanotechnology" -
Brian Wang
-
"Molecular Manufacturing and the Need for Crime Science" - Deborah Osborne
-
"Safer Molecular Manufacturing Through Nanoblocks"- Tom
Craver
-
"Are We Enlightened Guardians, Or Are We Apes Designing Humans?" - Douglas Mulhall
The essays published in the previous issue of
Nanotechnology Perceptions
are:
-
"Nanotechnology Dangers and Defenses" - Ray Kurzweil
-
"Molecular Manufacturing: Too Dangerous to Allow?" - Robert A. Freitas Jr.*
-
"Nano-Guns, Nano-Germs, and Nano-Steel" - Mike Treder
-
"Molecular Manufacturing and 21st Century Policing" - Tom
Cowper
-
"The Need For Limits" - Chris Phoenix
-
"Globalization and Open Source Nano Economy" - Giulio Prisco
-
"Cultural Dominants and Differential MNT Uptake" - Damien
Broderick
-
"Nanoethics and Human Enhancement? - Patrick Lin & Fritz
Allhoff
-
"Strategic Sustainable Brain " - Natasha Vita-More
-
"Is AI Near a Takeoff Point?" - J. Storrs Hall
-
"Singularities and Nightmares: The Range of Our Futures" - David Brin
*
These essays are © Robert A. Freitas Jr., and are not released under GFDL.
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