Folie 1 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Folie 1

Description:

nanoscale researchers, science policy makers, foresight analysts, ... (nanoparticle toxicity) are addressed in familar ways, unknown risks must be considered. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:25
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: Nord150
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Folie 1


1
Preparing NANOTECHNOLOGY for Politics
Copenhagen, September 2005
2
preparing
  • microscopists prepare samples for analysis
  • nanoscale researchers, science policy makers,
    foresight analysts, ethicists, journalists, and
    other actors prepare nanotechnology for public
    discussion

3
NANOTECHNOLOGY
  • preparing nanotechnology
  • cant be done
  • for obvious reasons (hybris vs. humility/Sheila
    Jasanoff)
  • must be done
  • because NANOTECHNOLOGY is formless, amorphous,
    unwieldy, monstrous
  • everyone does it

4
Too big to handle?
  • It doesnt matter whether we define
  • nanotechnology manipulating/positioning atoms at
    will, thus sooner or later molecular
    manufacturing, global abundance, end of work,
    infinite consumption, nothing will stay the same
  • (today we are in principle in a position to
    construct new materials atom by atom and molecule
    by molecule, analogously to building a model out
    of Lego bricks)

5
Too big to handle?
  • or instead
  • nanotechnology the study of phenomena and
    manipulation of materials at atomic, molecular,
    and supramolecular scales, where properties
    differ significantly from those at a larger
    scale
  • (Due to the enabling character of nanosciences
    and nanotechnologies advances can be made in
    virtually all technology sectors)

6
Too big too handle?
  • The substantial visionary and the empty enabling
    conceptions
  • cannot be distinguished as short or long term, as
    speculative/false and sober/true
  • neither is bounded
  • both present hopeful monstrosities (Joel
    Mokyr) Monstrosity doesnt refer to monster,
    but to a contraption or entity which cant do
    very much yet. Like a baby. And also like a baby,
    it is hopeful because it embodies potential,
    promises. (Arie Rip)

7
Managing monstrous unwieldiness?
  • it is essential that this is done on the basis
    of recent insights into the unpredictable nature
    of the process of innovation
  • one approach understand social dynamics, analyze
    rhetorical strategies, for example how does
    nanotechnology become defined by various actors
    in the context of different time-frames (Selin)
  • another approach show how three different
    conceptions of nanotechnology open overlapping
    spaces for political action and the importance
    of clearly positioning oneself

8
Nanotechnology in the singular
  • Nanotechnology as a template for envisioning the
    future (Arie Rip NANOTECHNOLOGY as ideograph).
  • That template can be suggestive of utopian/
    dystopian visions or it can invite social
    imagination,
  • it can suggest technological determinism (this is
    coming!) or allow for social shaping, moratoria.
  • Nanotechnology is a generic technology, able to
    pave the way for a new industrial revolution,
    equal to those ushered in by the introduction of
    the steam engine, electrification and computer
    technology.

9
Nanotechnology in the singular
  • Nanotechnology as a template or ideograph
  • has nothing to do with actual research, with more
    or less realism it is not about innovation
  • but has everything to do with the kind of
    technical future we imagine or fear, it is about
    who we are and want to become
  • it is about the possible breakdown of central
    assumptions We are mortal, only living
    creatures think, human life is invaluable, the
    earth will remain habitable, etc. (George
    Whitesides)

10
Nanotechnology in the singular
  • Public discourse manages unwieldiness by
    entertaining it.
  • Since it is not about actual research and
    development, it is not right or wrong about
    nanotechnology.
  • Drexlers, Rocos, EUs, Danish promises and
    their threat that this is coming! are on a par
    (grey goo scenario, cascading effects,
    natures nanotechnology the virus are
    interchangeable).
  • There are no ethical issues other than those
    governing public discourse (for example,
    respect).
  • NANOTECHNOLOGY is out of the hands of science
    and science policy.

11
Nano as a Key Technology
  • Key or enabling technologies designates a
    manner of doing research (somewhat familiar from
    synthetic chemistry, materials science).
  • The primary objective ... is to promote real
    industrial breakthroughs .... This requires
    changes in emphasis in Community research from
    short to longer term as well as in innovation,
    which must move from incremental to radical
    innovation and breakthrough strategies, while
    emphasising an integrating approach. (FP6
    Workprogramme)

12
Nano as a Key Technology
  • Key or enabling technologies
  • research in the design mode contextualized
    within projects that have long-term application
    perspectives (fundamental science research is
    replaced by fundamental technology research)
  • open to numerous applications, essentially
    underdetermined (as opposed to nuclear power, war
    on cancer, man on the moon, artificial
    intelligence)
  • providing keys but which doors should be
    opened?

13
Key or Fundamental Technology
  • The openness of nanotechnology emerges also from
    a philosophy of science analysis of its interests
    and methods. The Danish Foresight report likens
    it prematurely to Pasteur or Hansen.

14
Key or Fundamental Technology
  • We acquired the capability for controlled
    growth of carbon nanotubes on a silicon substrate
    surely, this is of enormous practical
    importance.

Closeness to application
??
NT
??
Interest in acquiring basic capabilities and
achieving control in the exotic territory of
the nanocosm.
15
Key or Fundamental Technology
  • Further qualifications are needed Regarding
    particles, coatings, or fabrics nanotechnology
    has achieved much that is Edisonian already.
    But as the history of materials science shows,
    only a few individuals want to explore
    fundamental issues regarding nanostructured
    materials.

Closeness to application
Development and critique of fundamental theories
??
Basic theories as tools for understanding novel
properties
NT
??
Interest in acquiring basic capabilities and
achieving control in the exotic territory of
the nanocosm.
16
Social Imagination for Nano
  • Key technologies offer unique opportunities for
    public engagement, for the discovery of local or
    niche capabilities and opportunites, for public
    and private investment (and for citizens to
    become vested).
  • Thus, Danish nanotechnology centers as innovation
    incubators as research design centers as contexts
    of mediation where supply push of technological
    visions is matched with demands?

17
Social Imagination for Nano
  • Science policy, foresight, upstream technology
    assessment, public engagement manages
    unwieldiness by editing proposals for
    technological solutions to societal problems (and
    by matching national capabilities, interests,
    demands).
  • A creative, proactive role for ethics we need to
    learn how to wish well (Aladdin).

18
Issues, Implications, Impacts?
  • By definition, key or enabling technologies have
    vast potential but no specific implications.
  • It is illusory to address societal and ethical
    issues on this level.
  • Doing so anyway is mere posturing, creates a
    false sense of security and cannot go beyond the
    obvious
  • Familiar-sounding impacts (nanoparticle toxicity)
    are addressed in familar ways, unknown risks must
    be considered.

19
Issues, Implications, Impacts?
  • In this respect, the Danish Foresight Report is
    more honest (by saying less) than the European
    Action Plan.
  • Alongside the expected favourable opportunities
    and consequences, considerable uncertainties and
    new and partially unknown hazards are also
    attached to nanotechnology. Any negative aspects
    should therefore be carefully considered and
    dealt with in the individual activities.
  • It is important that applications that are
    evidently dangerous should be halted or subjected
    to regulation with strict toxicological controls.
    This is very important in order to maintain
    confidence that the widespread use of
    nanotechnology will not have undesirable
    consequences.

20
Issues, Implications, Impacts?
  • In contrast, the European Action Plan outlines in
    detail an effective dialogue with all
    stakeholders.
  • But instead of drawing on specific opportunities
    for public engagement in the design of research,
  • it outlines what might as well be a campaign for
    nuclear power
  • the public to be informed about nanotechnology
  • its attitudes measured
  • impacts and risks will be studied
  • where is the dialogue?

21
nano-technologies
  • After NANOTECHNOLOGY (in the singular), nano as
    key technology, third and last nano-technologies
    (in the plural).
  • Managing unwieldiness by focusing on one
    specific technology at a time
  • each with its own potential benefits, societal
    impacts, ethical and cultural implications.

22
nano-technologies
  • What do these three nanotechnological
    possibilities have in common?
  • Development and design of biocompatible materials
    for drug delivery, solving problems of slow
    release, passage of the blood-brain barrier, etc.
  • Development of nanobiotechnology for the repair
    of defective neurons by the application of
    electrically conducting nanostructures.
  • Practical application of alloys or ceramic
    materials that crystallise with very small grain
    size (high strength and good workability) for
    high-value products, from the micro to the macro
    scale, from implants to sports equipment.

23
nano-technologies
  • What do these three nanotechnological
    possibilities have in common?
  • each involves more or less direct control of
    molecular structure (this was a weak or trivial
    common denominator before nano, why should it be
    strong and significant now?)
  • each has benefits, impacts, ethical issues of its
    own
  • the development of each is an open-ended
    experiment where society is the laboratory we
    need to be vested in order to share the risk

24
nano-technologies
  • If they dont have anything significant in common
    why lump them together?
  • National Nanotechnology Initiatives should
    prepare transition to sectoral nano-technologies
  • now one unit for funding development of medical
    lab-on-a-chip, stain-resistant fabrics,
    artificial bacteria for environmental cleanup,
    nanotags for product identification
  • why not? one unit to fund modelling of global
    warming, nano-sensors for environmental
    monitoring, artificial bacteria for environmental
    cleanup, social attitudes and incentives for
    environmentally responsible manufacturing etc.

25
nano-technologies
  • One way to read the Danish Technology Foresight
    report (and others)
  • Nano as a key technology needs to be oriented
    towards specific projects and affords opportunity
    to build on local strengths, to meet local
    demands, etc.
  • Thus, an attempt is made to identify specific
    technological research programs.
  • But under the spell and pull of nanotechnology
    the specificity gets lost again seven very broad
    high-priority technology areas that exclude very
    little

26
Conclusion
  • NANOTECHNOLOGY (in the singular) Public
    discourse manages unwieldiness by entertaining
    it. An important conversation with little
    immediate relevance for science policy.
  • Nano as a Key Technology Science policy,
    public engagement manages unwieldiness by
    editing proposals for technological solutions to
    societal problems. A unique opportunity for
    responsible and productive design of research.
  • nano-technologies For the consideration of
    issues, implications, impacts we need to manage
    unwieldiness by focusing on one specific
    technology at a time.

Three conceptions acting together.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com