Members of the Global Task Force of The Center for Responsible Nanotechnology (CRN) have written 11 new essays addressing the implications of molecular manufacturing. KurzweilAI.net will be posting all 11, starting today with essays by Nick Bostrom (Nanoethics and Technological Revolutions) and Robert A. Freitas, Jr. (What Price Freedom?).
Last month, eleven original essays about the
implications of
molecular manufacturing—an
advanced form of nanotechnology—were
posted on
KurzweilAI.net.
Written by members of a
Global
Task Force on Implications and Policy, some of the essays offered
promising opportunities, while others raised troubling concerns.
Now we have eleven new essays that delve into additional
possibilities and impacts of the technology, again authored by
members of CRN’s Global Task Force. All twenty-two articles were
edited by Mike Treder and Chris Phoenix, co-founders of the nonprofit
Center for Responsible Nanotechnology (CRN).
The mandate of the CRN Task Force is to thoroughly investigate
the societal and environmental implications of advanced nanotechnology;
to separate real from fictional; and to develop comprehensive,
responsible, and workable recommendations. We began this focused
effort in August 2005 with a few core people, including Ray Kurzweil
(CEO of Kurzweil Technologies), Jerry Glenn (Director of the AC/UNU
Millennium Project), David Brin (author of The Transparent Society),
Nick Bostrom (Director, Future
of Humanity Institute, Oxford University), and Robert A. Freitas
Jr. (author of Nanomedicine).
Since then, our Task Force has grown to more than 65
people on five continents. We are continuing to add others with
diverse backgrounds and points of view. Additional experts in
geopolitics, economics, ethics, ecology, and international policy
formation will be recruited. Without mutual understanding and
cooperation on a global level, the hazardous potentials of advanced
nanotechnology could spiral out of control and deny any hope of
realizing the benefits to society.
Of course, reaching conclusions will not be a quick process.
The early work of the CRN Task Force has underscored our realization
that there are no
simple answers or simple solutions. Our plan from the beginning
has been to concentrate first on defining the challenge: What
risks do we really face? How do they relate to each other? What
is most important to know in order to design wise and effective
policies for molecular manufacturing?
The essays you are about to read approach these questions
from a variety of different directions.
In our opening piece, Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom sets the
stage with an overview of previous transformative technologies
and their ethical challenges in “Nanoethics
and Technological Revolutions: A Précis.” Following that,
Michael Buerger, a Professor of Criminal Justice at Bowling Green
State University takes us “From
The Enlightenment to N-Lightenment,” providing historical
perspective and amusing personal commentary.
“What
Price Freedom?” is an important and disturbing analysis by Robert A.
Freitas Jr., a leading nanotechnology researcher, of the difficult
dilemmas we may face when confronted by a choice between the danger
of freedom and the security of tyranny.
If personal nanofactories supplant a large fraction of traditional
manufacturing, distribution, and retailing, then companies and
their employees could be impacted by the millions. In “The
(Needed) New Economics of Abundance,” entrepreneur and
computer expert Steve Burgess shows why existing economic structures
may be unable to withstand the strain, and why the adoption of
new paradigms could be essential. Robert A. Freitas Jr. offers
a contrasting view in “Economic
Impact of the Personal Nanofactory,” his second essay
for this collection.
Futurist and business consultant Michael Vassar looks at both
commercial and security issues in “Corporate
Cornucopia: Examining the Special Implications of Commercial MNT
Development,” and then Australian social scientist Don
Maclurcan tackles the topic of “Molecular
Manufacturing and the Developing World: Looking to Nanotechnology
for Answers.”
In “Considering
Military and Ethical Implications of Nanofactory-level Nanotechnology,”
computer engineer Brian Wang provides a deeply researched exploration
of nanotech impacts on future warfare. Deborah Osborne, a crime
analyst and book author, offers her expert views in “Molecular
Manufacturing and the Need for Crime Science.”
How can we manage the unprecedented power of nanotechnology?
Computer scientist Tom Craver describes some approaches that could
make a difference in “Safer
Molecular Manufacturing Through Nanoblocks.” And, finally,
author and activist Douglas Mulhall confronts us with some tough
ethical (and survival) questions in his essay, “Are
We Guardians, Or Are We Apes Designing Humans?”
Covering topics
from commerce to criminology, from ethics to economics, and from
our remote past to our distant future, this collection of essays
illustrates the profound transformation that nanotechnology will
have on all aspects of human society.
Progress toward developing the technical requirements for
desktop molecular manufacturing is moving forward rapidly. The
ideas you will learn about here are not just interesting speculation,
but are very real challenges that we must prepare to meet in the
near future.
Mike Treder, Executive Director
Chris Phoenix, Director of Research
Center
for Responsible Nanotechnology
Note: The opinions
expressed in these essays are those of the individual authors
and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Center for
Responsible Nanotechnology, nor of its parent organization, World
Care.