Dyson On Grey Goo, Bioterrorism, and Censorship 236
Phronesis writes "In "The Future Needs Us," Freeman Dyson reviews Michael Crichton's Prey. After disposing of the bad science (The Reynolds number of nanobots 'the size of red blood cells' would limit their top speed to 2 mm/sec, which would make it hard for them to swarm or chase people; Solar power would provide no more than 20 nanowatts, which would not be sufficient for the activities the book describes; etc.) he turns to the more general theme of fearmongering about nanotechnology and biotechnology, comparing Prey to Nevil Shute's On the Beach ('Prey is not as good as On the Beach, but it is bringing us an equally important message')." Read on for a few more notes from the story, which makes an interesting followup to reader cybrpnk2's positive review of Prey .
"Dyson notes Joy's oddly prescient comment in April 2000 that
but objects to Joy's recommendation that we should 'relinquish pursuit of that knowledge...so dangerous that we judge it better that [it] never be available.' After a discussion of the actual history of biological warfare and bioterrorism, Dyson quotes Milton's Areopagitica in defense of intellectual and scientific freedom, concluding that 'Perhaps, after all, as we struggle to deal with the enduring problems of reconciling individual freedom with public safety, the wisdom of a great poet who died more than three hundred years ago may still be helpful.'"I think it is no exaggeration to say we are on the cusp of the further perfection of extreme evil, an evil whose possibility spreads well beyond that which weapons of mass destruction bequeathed to the nation-states, on to a surprising and terrible empowerment of extreme individuals.
Freeman Dyson is great! (Score:3, Interesting)
Insult! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Insult! (Score:3, Interesting)
I tend agree with you on that point, but I also have to admit that if it wasn't for him I wouldn't even know about other people's theories. And let us not forget his articulation on the concept of the meme, a worthy epiphany in its own right.
Re:Freeman Dyson is great! (Score:3, Informative)
I don't agree with everything in this article. But it is a very reasonable approach to considering a very broad topic in a very limited piece. Unfortunately, it isn't a sufficiently reactionary assertion of black-and-white dogmatism to appeal to this crowd.
While people pick their sides and play tug of war over the "issues," while politicians see every issue as leverage to maintain their positions of power, trading slogans for solutions and consistently getting too little done, while wealth interests continue to gaze intently at the quarterly earnings at the expense of any rational consideration of the future, we can assume that we will continue to impact the evolution of life on earth the old-fashioned way: blindly, dumbly, mutely.
Re:Freeman Dyson is great! (Score:2)
Re:Freeman Dyson is great! (Score:2)
Did you perhaps mean Richard Feynmann, or Stephen Hawking? :) Dyson is an older contemporary of both of them. I've never heard of anyone named Richard Dawkings.... (Although it's possible I wouldn't have, I rather doubt it -- I'm a physics hanger-on.)
Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem with this is that knowledge (or even simply ideas) once taken out cannot be jammed back into the can. Nor should it. Security through obscurity is never really secure... if you know what I mean...
Re:Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:2)
"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever."
- Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
Re:Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:2)
That's the point: Therefore, we need to establish prohibitions on such research preemptively. In the article, Dyson discusses the 10-month worldwide moratorium on recombinant DNA research that was enacted in the seventies. After two international conferences, different types of recombinant DNA research were grouped into different classes, including a class of "too dangerous and hence forbidden."
All in all, it seems like this has been a good thing. Or perhaps you would prefer that we had antibiotic-resistant radiation-hardened botulism toxin-producing strains of E. coli culturing in the labs of our nation's bioweapons researchers?
-renard
Re:Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:2, Insightful)
Hence the security through obscurity reference - while it may take bad people longer to figure it out without our help (it's obscure, and they won't have a lot of help), we're going to be totally unprepared for it when they do. We won't even have an inkling of an idea of how the exploit/virus/nanobug/magic death box/whatever works, and we'll be fucked as far as finding a fix quickly goes. If we had researched it, we might have found a fix already, or at least we'd have an idea of where to start.
Re:Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:2)
Anyway, the point is this: we will not be safe untill we as humans get to the point where even the most dangerous knowledge is safe in every mans hand...what I'm saying is that unless people are perfect, knowledge will always be dangerous. But that knowledge is still crucial to the furtherment of humanity and the conservation of the earth. Knowing that fertiliser and orange juice can be made inot an explosive is dangerous knowledge...but drinking the juice is good ofr the body, and fertiliser is good for plants...and if someone devises a way of using the aforementioned explosian to make an environmentally and mechanically safe combustion motor, you'll be glad we had the knowledge that thsoe ingredients could be combined to an explosive.
Re:Security thourgh obscurity? (Score:2)
Gray Goo vs. real nanotech (Score:3, Interesting)
Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:4, Interesting)
Dyson & Bill Joy both relate to the Unabomber Manifesto,
which has some stunning sections on technology:
Industrial-Technological Society Cannot Be Reformed
Restriction Of Freedom Is unavoidable In Industrial Society
The 'Bad' Parts Of Technology Cannot Be Seperated From The 'Good' Parts
Technology Is A More Powerful Social Force Than The Aspiration Freedom
The complete manifesto is here [panix.com]
BEFORE YOU REPLY, please read a bit.
He has some ideas that are VERY similar
to ideas that get posted here on slashdot.
One excerpt here...
While technological progress AS A WHOLE continually narrows our sphere of freedom, each new technical advance CONSIDERED BY ITSELF appears to be desirable. Electricity, indoor plumbing, rapid long-distance communications . . . how could one argue against any of these things, or against any other of the innumerable technical advances that have made modern society? It would have been absurd to resist the introduction of the telephone, for example. It offered many advantages and no disadvantages. Yet as we explained in paragraphs 59-76, all these technical advances taken together have created world in which the average man's fate is no longer in his own hands or in the hands of his neighbors and friends, but in those of politicians, corporation executives and remote, anonymous technicians and bureaucrats whom he as an individual has no power to influence.
Re:Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:2, Insightful)
Try reading (in one of those new fangled book thingies) some history about life before and during the industrial revolution. The 'average man's fate' was much less in his own hands than it is now. How can you choose your own fate when life expectancy is like like 30 years? Ever heard of slavery, serfdom, kingdoms, or indentured servitude? How would life be now without technology.. no antibiotics or other medical procedures besides leeches, no printing presses, no advanced learning available for 95% of the population, transportation by animal with no roads, no microwave, no space travel.. you get the idea. Sure technology can be intrusive and even dangerous, but there's no way I would want to go back to the way the things were.
One other minor point, Ted Kaczynski made a good show of living with no water or electricity, but where did his food, typewriter, paper, bomb equipment, address lookup, mail delivery or even clothes come from?
Re:Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:2)
No matter what you think of the unabombers methods (I for one find them appaling, but that's me), you should read the manifesto. It is written unarguably by a smart person and contains quite a bit of truth. Failing that, it contains a lot of material that actually makes you think; pertaining to the quoted bit, being tied to one point (by plumbing, which means you need to have a 'home base'
Personally I'd say that that is a direct consequence of the contract you make with society (google for it, it's a widespread idea, that 'contract with society'), but the unabomber manifesto is still a thought provoking bit of work.
And you know what? Maybe Ted whatsisname is right: if he hadn't done what he did, I wouldn't of read it...in that respect, he got what he wanted. That makes him smart enough to know how to get what he wanted; not compasionate, but smart. And reading what smart people say can lead to something all powerfull people fear: thinking.
Re:Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:5, Informative)
In short, technology is not to blame in any way. People are to blame.
-Billy
Re:Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:2)
Put another way, who we are is inseparable from our technology. Technology is our adaptive response to the problem of survival. It is what makes our species unique on Earth. Talking about humans without reference to their technology is like talking about sharks without reference to their teeth.
Re:Unabomber Manifesto relates to nanotech (Score:2)
I can see why you say that (considering my post), but it's not really pertinent. The Unabomber says that technology makes our lives more complex; Lewis says that the dominion of Man over Nature (a phrase more used in his time than in ours) is actually, in the final analysis, the dominion of one man over every man. Both are considering technology; the Unabomber treats it as an abstract entity in its own right, while Lewis considers its qualities when seen as a means and an end.
It's as if someone wrote an essay claiming that guns were destroying our lives, and someone else wrote a book examining how the pursuit of guns was motivated, and speculating on the results of such motivation and actions. The analogy is perilously close, except that the Unabomber went on to murder a large number of people, something that most anti-gun people wouldn't consider (to say the least
The guns-don't-kill-people analogy doesn't even come close here; Lewis isn't claiming that technology is harmless; instead he's looking past the technology to the motivations of the people using and developing it.
Put another way, who we are is inseparable from our technology. Technology is our adaptive response to the problem of survival. It is what makes our species unique on Earth. Talking about humans without reference to their technology is like talking about sharks without reference to their teeth.
Humans have MANY sources of adaptive response to problems of survival. Lewis doesn't talk about humans without resource to their technology; actually, he considers it as part of the issue, a larger issue, of how and why humans use technology and science in general.
The Unabomber, on the other hand? Feh.
-Billy
Too many ALL CAPS... I smell a conspiracy brewing (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know if anyone else had come up with a similar law before I thought of it a number of years ago (thanks mostly to the brilliant work [amazon.com] of none other than Ivan Stang [subgenius.com]), so I'll put a flag in it right now and call it Wee's Law of Tinfoil Hats.
-B
Re:Too many ALL CAPS... I smell a conspiracy brewi (Score:2)
I think you're right. A a matter of fact, I think I can prove it.
Yep. I[ve proven that you are correct. Trouble is that Slashdot won't let me post my proof here, so I put it on my site [monkeygumbo.com].
-B
Re:Too many ALL CAPS... I smell a conspiracy brewi (Score:2)
-B
It's all technology's fault (Score:2)
But the technical advances to blame are agriculture and irrigation, not telephones and indoor plumbing. Does the word "serf" ring any bells? The average man's fate hasn't been in his own hands since hunter-gatherer times.
Impossible? I think not (Score:5, Insightful)
With the exemption of the ending which I wont spoil here it was a very plausible book.
You have to understand that with solar power in nanite groups, you're not just generating electricity, but also heat which causes convection etc and nanites could control this force among others naturally present in the environment.
Its exactly this kind of emergent behaviour that crichton was talking about and this guy has seemed to miss the point.
$.02
Re:Impossible? I think not (Score:3, Insightful)
FUCK YES! (Score:2)
I realy don't know how else to put this.
But FUCK YES!
Accusing Dyson of not having a imagination is like saying water can't be wet.
Freeman Dyson is one of the smartest people alive. Don't allways agree with him, (in this case I do). :>
Only other person with that range of insight is Roger Penrose. I don't always agree with Roger either.
Hmm come to think of it Penrose pisses me off somtimes but he allways makes me think.
Re:Impossible? I think not (Score:2)
Ever hear of a Dyson sphere?
and Dyson interaction picture of quantum mechanics, and Dyson vacuum-energy capacitor
the _simplest_ bright ideas he had
I'll wager he knows more about the physics of nanotech than Michael Chriton, you, and the entire readership of
About physics in general, very probably true, but I wouldn't wager
there aren't a few actual nanotech researchers who browse
ocasionally.
Re:Why is this modded up? (Score:2)
But, deal with the real question (Score:2)
Now, the other objections are probably more reasonable, but this one has problems, and doesn't really seem like a valid criticism to me.
Re:But, deal with the real question (Score:2)
Also, one
Re:Impossible? I think not (Score:2)
Re:Impossible? I think not (Score:2)
Re:Impossible? I think not (Score:3, Insightful)
One. Nanites such as these acting together would still not be able to do more than a similar collective group of entities, like, say, a human being. And the individual nanites can still only move at 2mm per second, and they *don't* have a wide range of abilities (for example, human muscle tissue of various types can contract, which these nanites could never do).
And that is why human beings can't go faster than 2mm/s? (Which is all the speed that a human cell could probably travel for the same reason as applied to the nanites.) Suppose the nanites were to grab hold of each other to form small clusters of more substantial wing-like objects? Also, if a nanite could change its shape at all, then it could grab hold of adjacent nanites and mimic muscle contraction.
Two. The solar energy figures provided by Dyson - who knows a thing or two about such things - are for *total solar energy absorption*.
Wouldn't the same argument apply - if they worked together while the energy output of an individual wouldn't be much they might have a cumulative effect. Then again, I don't see too many solar-powered plants walking around too quickly - most things that move have to eat...
I won't debate you on 3 and 4 - I largely agree.
Again - I'm not saying that I find Prey very plausible. However, I wouldn't dismiss every concept within it out of hand.
Grey Goo arguments in other fields? (Score:4, Interesting)
According to him there used to be similar "Grey Goo" arguments surrounding some earlier particle accelerator work. There was some worry that an experiment, by chance, might create a form of matter that was more stable at lower energies, causing a chain reaction that would convert normal matter into this more "stable" matter, plus energy.
I really don't know enough about the field to flesh this out better. However, rather than being frightening, the conversation really captured how exciting fields on the edge can be.
Re:Grey Goo arguments in other fields? (Score:2, Informative)
In the 40's there was concern for a while that a nuclear blast could ignite the atmosphere. Calculations showed that to be false as well, of course.
And, if you ever hear about the potential of producing black holes at the Large Hadron Collider, keep in mind 2 things:
(1) it's very unlikely
(2) they would evaporate quickly without hurting anyone - we know this because if a collider could make them, then cosmic rays are making them all the time just above the Earth and we're still here.
Re:Grey Goo arguments in other fields? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Grey Goo arguments in other fields? (Score:2)
Don't circulate this story too much, lest it catch the ear of some lameass, desperate "disaster movie" screenwriter who converts it into movie that convinces our moronic leaders to cut funding for fundamental physics.
What do nanobots eat? (Score:3, Interesting)
The dominant energy source around us is organic matter. You can't get much energy out of eating inorganic matter (rock) because, aside from carbon (coal, graphite, diamond), it's mostly well-oxidized and sitting in a free-energy minimum. That's why we don't burn rocks other than coal in the fireplace. This means that the nanobots would be competing with natural life forms for organic matter and I doubt they would do well in the competition.
The machinery by which living things extract energy from organic matter is quite sophisticated and I don't see any prospect for engineered nanotechnology out-competing basic bacteria on this front.
Similarly, if most of the energetically favorable raw material around is organic, if the nanobots are to reproduce, they will likely be built of organic compounds, so they are again competing with bacteria that have a 4 billion year head start in optimizing themselves for the environment. If they are built of inorganic compounds or make much use of elements that are not generally found in living matter, then they will need to use much of their metabolic output to fighting entropy as they purify (reduce sand to silicon, for instance) and synthesize the necessary building blocks.
Until the question of where a nanobot gets its food and how it reproduces are plausibly explained (we don't need reduction to practice, but some plausible background is necessary), I will not take scenarios involving huge swarms of malevolent grey goo seriously, even in fiction.
Re:What do nanobots eat? (Score:2)
Furthermore, why can't Man stand on the shoulders of this giant? Scientists are watching bacteria, and always very interested in their tricks. If they see something useful and copy it, they won't get a C&D letter from the bacterium's lawyer.
Strangelove (Score:5, Funny)
A-ha-ha-ha-ha.
Now then, Dmitri. You know how we've always talked about the possibility... of something going wrong with the dust. The dust, Dmitri. The nano dust! Well, now, what happened, is... ah, one of our scientists, he had a sort of... well, he went a little funny in the head. You know, just a little... funny. And, ah, he went and did a silly thing. Well, I'll tell you what he did. He ordered his dust... to attack your country. Ah, well let me finish Dmitri - let me finish Dmitri... Well listen, how do you think I feel about it?! Can you imagine how I feel about it, Dmitri? Why do you think I'm calling you? Just to say hello?
Of course I like to speak to you! Of course I like to say hello! Not now, but anytime, Dmitri. I'm just calling up to tell you something terrible has happened. It's a friendly call, of course it's a friendly call. Listen, if it wasn't friendly... you probably wouldn't have even gotten it.
They will not reach their targets for at least another hour. I am... I am positive, Dmitri. Listen, I've been all over this with your ambassador, it is not a trick.
Well, I'll tell you. We'd like to give your HVAC staff a complete run-down on the targets, the flight characteristics, and the defensive systems of the dust. Yes! I mean, i-i-i-if we're unable to denature the dust, then... I'd say that, ah... well, we're just gonna have to help you destroy it, Dmitri. All right, well listen now. Who should we call? Who should we call, Dmitri? The, wha-whe, the People... you, sorry, you faded away there. The People's Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning Headquarters. Where is that, Dmitri? In Omsk, right? Yes? Oh, you'll call them first, will you? Uh-huh. Listen, do you happen to have the phone number on you, Dmitri? Whe-ah, what? I see, just ask for Omsk Information.
Ah-ah-eh-um-hmmmmm.
I'm sorry, too, Dmitri. I'm very sorry. Alright, you're sorrier than I am! But I am as sorry as well. I am as sorry as you are, Dmitri. Don't say that you're more sorry than I am, because I'm capable of being just as sorry as you are. So we're both sorry, alright?
Alright.
Excellent fun to read, if a bit mad at the end (Score:2)
However, it does suck on a few points:
1) It's written like a movie script. There's one part where the characters rush into a supply shed past a large case of dynamite, then scenes later where the sprinkler system is mentioned again, and again. Gosh, those props are not going to be used later in the book, are they?
2) The last third is just plain silly. I don't care if other
3) Crichton has done the whole "Scientists not understanding the powers they meddle with" thing before. Andromeda Strain, Jurassic Park, Timeline... on the other hand, this has made him a very rich man. More power to him. And I'll probably give the movie a look when (not if) it comes out.
Go read it for the human elements, and don't look at the nanotechnology too closely.
Dr Fish
saw a copy at the local bookstore, read the first (Score:2)
So what's up with Critchton and women? (Score:2, Interesting)
Mebbe Mr. Critchton should go for a little sensitivity training?
Dyson rocks, though.
DT
Re:So what's up with Critchton and women? (Score:2)
It's quite simple, really. Critchton is a MAN and as such there is no way he can conjure up a truly realistic woman. Equally so, a woman cannot possibly conjure up a truly realistic man. They are very mentally/emotionally different creatures incapable of fully understanding/experiencing the other's "reality".
That said, Crichton is a bit more hamfisted in his generation of pseudo-women than many (Clancy doesn't create even realistic men, only pseudo-superheros and supervillians).
Could be worse... (Score:2)
Pretty Typical of Crichton's Work (Score:5, Insightful)
Crichton seems to be a reasonable writer. I say this in the sense that his style is readable and engaging. The topics are rarely boring. The characters seem to be plausible.
The problem is that he gets details in science often wildly wrong. Almost all the geneticists I spoke to flinch at _Jurassic Park_. The supercomputer people I work with smirk about his treatment of our field. The situation is not unlike how the military people and defense contractor engineers read Clancy: it's a good read, but don't expect anything like reality from it. (re my own experiences having worked @ one of the laser test ranges in NM and comparing it to _Cardinal of the Kremlin_ or the reactions from engineers to people that cite Clancy on sci.military.naval or rec.aviation.military).
The good question is...is this a service he's doing for us, the scientists and engineers? Or is it a massive disservice? The weighing that needs to be done is whether or not the service of bringing up the fact that people need to pay attention to new technologies and their implications vs the really bad extrapolations and wrong impressions the guy gives people about what we are able to do or even how the stuff works at all...
People will react with "This is only fiction..." but then most people don't often read about the real science and get caught up, do they? They find it dull and, thus, get their impressions from these works...
How can the future "need" us or not? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why did Joy adopt this curious phraseology? What does it mean for the future to need us? How can the future have needs at all? It's like saying that Left needs us, or Up doesn't need us. I've never understood it.
Re:How can the future "need" us or not? (Score:2)
We could cause our own extinction. We might cause a new form of life to arise that could outlive us. We would essentially be the "primordial ooze" where real intelligence springs from. The future life and world at that time wouldn't need us anymore.
Re:How can the future "need" us or not? (Score:2)
I think he is trying to make an association with technological progress. As we develop more and more technology to do the tasks that formerly required a human being it is reasonable to say we don't "need" a human to do the job.
Technogical advancement to the point of obsolesence is different than human beings blowing each other up in a war because in the case of war we don't have a future. It's over for humanity. In the other case everything about our society continues (except of course for us). Hence, the future doesn't need us.
I don't know if this is what he intended to communicate and I haven't written it as well as I'd like to have, but I hope you get the point I'm trying to make.
Who cares about nanobots? (Score:4, Funny)
What happens, when a swarm of these things invades your brain, and suddenly changes some unobserved quantum value to another unobserved quantum value? Your entire SOUL could change, and there is nothing you could do about it!!! Even if neurological science progesses to a fantastic level, upon examination, no one could conclude that your mind had been tampered with...
This is why I propose a worldwide ban, without exception, on yoctotechnology experimentation. We can't act soon enough!
Dyson well known for his sphere.. (Score:3, Informative)
Also mentioned in the TNG episode Relics [startrek.com].
Olaf Stapledon Sphere (Score:5, Informative)
"Some science fiction writers have wrongly given me the credit for inventing the idea of an artificial biosphere. In fact, I took the idea from Olaf Stapledon, one of their own colleagues:
"This passage I found in a tattered copy of Stapledon's Star Maker which I picked up in Paddington Station in London in 1945."
oddly prescient? (Score:2)
Ok, what about that comment is "oddly prescient"? Does the submitter not understand what "prescient" means; does he not understand the comment; or (the most generous interpretation I can find) is he merely noting that Joy foresaw--not anything that has passed in reality--but further science-fiction doom-saying?
Read these instead if you like NanoSF (Score:3, Informative)
Deception Well by Linda Nagata (also The Bohr Maker, and Vast, the prequel and sequel -- though DW reads fine on its own). Nano-infected planet holds keys to all kinds of mysterious stuff, including how this not-quite human person is able to live among the humans.
Limit of Vision by Linda Nagata. OK, I reallyreally like her stuff. This one is closer to present-time, and doesn't quite hit the grey goo phase... but avoids it narrowly. Not her best, but still very entertaining.
Truly, NanoSF is a bit passe. Blood Music dates from '86 (according to Amazon). Current cutting-edge SF tends more towards bioengineering, plagues, eco-crashes (Dust), or truly wonky time travel (Chronoliths).
Re:Read these instead if you like NanoSF (Score:2)
,br> All Tomorrow's Parties-William Gibson
Nanotech is important, but this isn't a doom-and-gloom novel. And, as Gibson typically is, everything's really chaotic until the last 5 pages or so.
The Diamond Age-Neal Stephenson
Nanotech-saturated. Yet once again, not a grey goo novel.
Frankly, Crichton strikes me as a luddite who needs to stop writing alarmism. He uses bad pseudoscience and then uses this limited scientific understanding to start crying chicken little whenever some new idea comes out and changes the scientific paradigm. All it does is freak out the general public and turn scientists into pariahs.
We already have the tool to stop the grey goo (Score:5, Funny)
We have the means to stop this onslaught, a lovely piece of legislation called the DMCA and an army of lawyers to back it up.
Any badass nanite that tries to replicate itself will be doing so without paying the appropriate copyright fees to the original creator and will summarily get slapped with a nice lawsuit and some jailtime to cool it's heels (erm... cillia? flagella?).
Just in case that does not work, we have Senator Disney who will make sure that these abominations have DRM technology built into them from the get-go, so self-replicating nanites will come pre-spayed and neutered for our protection.
We need not even go that far. The very fact that such a beast is being created is a violation itself, since it's its own circumvention device.
HOLY SHIT, STOP THE PRESSES (Score:5, Funny)
Not only did the slashdot poster use both "its" and "it's" correctly, but (s)he did so adjacently!
I do believe that this is a slashdot first, folks. Any other poster would have confused possessive pronouns with contractions. The only possible explanation is that rworne is not a real slashdot poster, but rather a sentient nanite himself!
Re:HOLY SHIT, STOP THE PRESSES (Score:2)
Nanites! (Score:3, Funny)
You know, back when I made nanites, I told them to--
Aw, forget it. This joke is played out.
Re:HOLY SHIT, STOP THE PRESSES (Score:2)
Re:We already have the tool to stop the grey goo (Score:2)
Alternatively, you can smash the little buggers with some form of matter that they are unable to use. I am not worried.
We and They (Score:2)
Relinquish pursuit of that knowledge and development of those technologies so dangerous that we judge it better that they never be available.
As we now know, the Soviet Union violated the Biological Weapons Convention of 1972 on an extensive scale... until its collapse in 1991.
If the "we" in the first passage were "we, the world" then we could decide which technologies are too dangerous to pursue. Unfortunately the real world is made up of a collection of we's and they's, acting independently and at their own levels of wisdom. Any we that decides not to pursue a technology has no guarantee that they will do likewise. The fate of the world will rest, as usual, on the wisdom of whoever ends up dominating it.
One thing really pissed me off (Score:3, Insightful)
While Mr. Dyson is quite right in this observation, it seem almost absurd that he didn't see it fit to mention that post-Nixon USA also resumed research and large-scale production of biological weapons. For example, all evidence indicates that the "weapons-grade" anthrax sent through US mail was a strain developed by US weapons labs. What that anthrax scare revealed is just how many US military labs are working on the further weaponization of anthrax and other, more deadly biological agents.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2, Insightful)
Return a Time/Space anomoly to normal.
Seal an atmoshpere about to get ripped away from a planet.
Stun some nasty aliens.
Adjust the harmonics of a warp drive.
But, how can this be? It's not possible they say.
Get over it and just have fun.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
Dyson is a cool guy, but misguided on this one (Score:3, Interesting)
Not sure that too many people really believed that scientists could soon have dinosaurs rampaging through their back yard.
I think you've hit on an important point here: there's no reason to believe that anyone will take "Prey" any more seriously than they did Jurassic Park. In that sense, I think Dyson's entire piece is misguided. If he wants to argue with Bill Joy, he should do so directly, rather than dragging a piece of unrealistic irrelevant pulp fiction into it.
Dyson's comparison to "On the Beach" doesn't stand up to scrutiny. The consequences of a major nuclear war would not be very different, in the most important respects, from that described in On the Beach - i.e. unthinkable numbers of people would die, and life on Earth would barely be worth living. The situation with nanotech is nowhere near so clear.
Dyson claims he's trying to combat myths that might enter the public consciousness as a result of "Prey", but it's not clear that the public is going to be any more worried about the realistic consequences of nanotech, than it is about scientists cloning killer dinosaurs.
Re:Dyson is a cool guy, but misguided on this one (Score:2, Interesting)
Jurassic Park certainly isn't the origin of the 'genetic engineering is evil' train of thought, but it did bring the subject to the spotlight. It did show genetic engineering in a negative light. It did nothing but reinforce the publics 'Frankenstein syndrome' so to speak...
While people may not believe that exactly what Crichton writes will occur, he brings up 'cutting edge' technology and fairly consistently makes it to blame for various evils... A writer that's as popular as Crichton repeatedly beating the 'man shouldn't mess in God's domain' drum can't have a good effect on the public's opinion of science and technology.
Re:Dyson is a cool guy, but misguided on this one (Score:2)
I also think Crichton gives people what they want: cheap thrills with scary monsters, basically. Whether the monsters are dinosaurs, evil nanites, or bugs from space doesn't really make much difference. He's not so much shaping public opinion, as tapping into it. I don't think Dyson has to worry about terribly negative opinions of nanotech developing because of entertainment like "Prey".
Re:Dyson is a cool guy, but misguided on this one (Score:2)
In the case of "Prey", it speculates about technology that isn't even close to existing, and may never exist. Some of it may even be physically impossible. So, comparing the two books in terms of their ability to influence our collective psyches about a particular kind of technology makes no sense - since the nanotech described in Prey is nothing like the nanotech we're going to see in the next 10-50 years.
On the Beach was set a mere six years after its publication date. If Prey was set in 2009, it would make no sense. Nanites taking over people's brains? Oh yeah, that's gonna happen soon. I can't see people getting very worried, when they hear that some new product uses nanotech, about whether or not it's going to eat their brains for breakfast. There's just no comparison to "On the Beach". Dyson is way off base.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
That's what science fiction is. Move beyond that and it's fantasy, regardless of whether or not there are dragon's and wizards.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:3, Interesting)
There are a number of different styles of science fiction. We've got the kind you describe, where amazing technology exists solely because the author wants it to be there. The author wants something to happen, so he waves his hands and says 'it's all because of science.' There's no deeper meaning, and there's no attempt at any sort of realistic theory behind things. These stories are nothing but suspending disbelief and enjoying the ride.
Then there are the books that, while quite possibly written for entertainment as well, also go about playing the 'what-if' game... These are the sort of stories that, even if it isn't the main premise, wind up bringing up issues and trying to answer the question "If we had technology to do X, then what sort of things might happen to us..." These aren't trying to explain how the technology itself works, but rather how the having that technology affects people.
Finally, there are the science fiction books that actually try to propose valid explanations for what is going on...
There can be mixes amongst the categories(frequently something explains a theory and tries to analyze how it might affect people), but it's pretty easy to find examples of all these different types of books in SF... And it doesn't mean any one type is inferior to the others.
That said, while I haven't read this particular book, one of Crichton's recent books, Timeline, annoyed me with one particular trait. If it had been written as an 'enjoy the ride' style story, it would have been fine(though a little predictable, but that's a separate issue). The problem arose in that he spent large portions of the book quoting and referencing scientific papers and books on science trying desperately to justify and explain something, while he really didn't have any sort of grasp on the subject matter. Trying to pass yourself off as explaining the technology in SF, when you don't have a clue as to how the subjects your discussing work is something I find rather grating. If he'd just waved his hands and said 'and the scientists discovered time travel,' then I would have found the book significantly better...
Then again, this is just my opinion.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
However, things left in a parallel Universe (glasses) find their way to this Universe, and so on.
If you're saying something like a Multiverse, atleast make sure that you're consistent with what you claim. He himself sounded confused as to where the hell things are supposed to be.
And oh yes, that negative portrayal. The most brilliant physicist gets the boot, lands up in an era where he is subjected to the bubonic plague (or whatever crap it is) and dies. And all the good arts majors and non-techies lived happily ever after.
Duh.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:4, Insightful)
The "dude, it's fiction" thing only goes so far. Imagine some really stupid mistake that anyone would catch -- say, a novel set on the Atlantic coast of Kansas. Don't you think that would interfere with your suspension of disbelief, just a little? For people with any significant degree of scientific knowledge, dumb science mistakes are just as jarring.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
Wow! what a fantastic story line. If you don't want it, can I have it?
-c
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
The best Sci-Fi takes an absurd premise and says, 'well -- assume that Kansas has an Atlantic Seafront. How did it get that way and what are the ramifications?' You would probably come up with a quite interesting story to explain why the Eastern half of the USA is missing and what results from this.
Check out the David Brin novel The Practice Effect. In it he takes the laws of Thermodynamics and says 'what if...', in this case what if things got better with use? (ie., reversed entropy.) The mechanics of how it works are sketchy at the best of times (and amount to a hand-wave), but that is irrelevant because the story serves as a gedankenexperiment (sp?). The more outlandish the premises the better the explanation has to be, and (hopefully) the better the story.
Hey, even the Lensman series by E.E. Doc. Smith make good stories, even if they are boy's own tales of superhumanly competent demi-gods. And the Inertialess Drive
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
This book wasn't written in a vacuum (well, probably not). It's supposed to be creative fiction, yes, but it's also a classic Michael Crichton cautionary tale of "TECHNOLOGY GONE HORRIBLY WRONG!!" Remember when Jurassic Park came out, and news organizations had scientist-type persons assessing the likelihood that humans could genetically engineer dinosaurs? This is the same sort of thing. Professor Dyson is the scientist-type person, and the question posed is whether nanotech von Neumann machines could destroy the human race. He provides reasons why the scenario presented in the novel is not completely realistic, but I think that Dyson's review of the science and his review of the fiction are independent of each other. I haven't read Prey yet, but I have read nearly everything else by Crichton, and I've enjoyed most of them. I think a key factor in my enjoyment of many of them has been their sheer plausibility, and the way Crichton combines emerging technologies and scientific discoveries in unusual ways to produce a highly original story, like the combination of chaos theory and genetics in Jurassic Park. His works are generally rather heavy in the science component of science fiction- they're all set in the present or near future, take place on Earth, etc. I hardly think an examination of the science involved is unfair.
Re:It's FICTION for God's sake! (Score:2)
Re:Completely off-topic (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, the main page has been slow for me as well; it's probably not your admin.
You should post questions such as yours in the user-created discussions [slashdot.org] section.
Re:Interesting Speculation (Score:2, Informative)
This is plagiarized from an Amazon.com member review [amazon.com] to get karma points - scroll down to the 6th review on that page - I think the comment should be moderated redundant [slashdot.org]
Re:Interesting Speculation (Score:4, Insightful)
The narrative in Prey is boring and childish. Crichton shows no more command of English expression than your average freshman composition class. Events in the book which deserve some fear and some dread are treated without any emotion at all. Doesn't a descent into the subterranean world of a pulsing, mechanical evil demand some exposition? Crichton doesn't think so, and dismisses this climactic scene in at most twenty large-type, double-spaced pages.
There is so much good literature in the world that I regret having spent even the few hours I did reading Prey. Certainly don't buy it, and if you got it as a gift, try selling it to you local used shop and picking up something worthwhile.
Re:Interesting Speculation (Score:2)
Crichton shows no more command of English expression than your average freshman composition class.
I think your average Slashdotter would be more appropriate.
Screenplays masquerading as novels (Score:2)
I stopped reading Crichton because he stopped writing novels and started writing padded screenplays. There's rarely anything written about the internal aspects of the characters, it's all in the dialog. The setting and action sequences are spelled out in great details. And it's clear what parts are padding that's meant to be removed when cutting the story down to movie length. I wouldn't be surprised if he wrote the screenplay first then wrote the novellization.
Okay, you could argue that this was always the case, but it's gotten worse and worse with each book.
Re:Interesting Speculation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:[SPOILERS!!! WARNING]Interesting Speculation (Score:2)
SPOILERS BELOW!!!! PLEASE LOOK AWAY!
I was very frustrated by the fact that a virus that had been nibbling on the vat of e-coli would cause the swarms to scream and melt. I was expecting glitches and slow deterioriation and heart pounding suspense while the reader is unsure if the virus is even working. Instead, we get instant gratification. And then an explosion and super heated destruction just to make sure everything is good and wiped out.
So that sucked.
Then, why did the children just allow themselves to be given the virus and not fight back. If there were already three swarms working, why were they not already setting up a nest?
And the glow in the back yard seemed like Crichton was setting up for a sequal or something and then decided not to.
Over all, one of the best page turning and late night reading books I have enjoyed lately. Even if the science was rough, over all a very well written book.
Re:Brilliance... (Score:4, Insightful)
Science: Fact or Fiction (Score:3, Insightful)
What makes Science Fiction such a compelling genre for the discussion of ideas (particularly important social themes) is the fact that the environment of the story is unencumbered by the limitations of human understanding.
It provides a rich framework, with enough truth, and enough speculation, so as to remain interesting to the reader, and yet allow the author to explore complex issues which may or may not be just around the corner, and these issues are the point of the story. The science itself is window dressing.
Re:Science: Fact or Fiction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Brilliance... (Score:2)
If you look at the old masters (Asimov is a prime example) you'll notice that these people actually knew something about what they were writing. If not from their own PhD's, then because of their research. Now, it's just hacks who get their idea's from spurious internet pages like the crap sciencebox.dk instead of xxx.lanl.gov (no, that is
Re:Brilliance... (Score:3, Insightful)
The difference between statements made in history limiting man's abilities and those made by Dyson in the book review are that Dyson's are based on absolute physical law. Previous assertions such as man never being able to fly faster than the speed of sound had nothing to do with physical laws so much as underestimating mankind's engineering ability.
Even when curmudgeons were declaring that a craft heavier than air would never get off the ground you only had to look in the sky every time a bird, or an insect or a piece of paper flew by to know that it had to be possible. We knew back before the days of the Chuck Yeager and the Bell X-1 that objects could break the sound barrier. Bullets did it all the time and it was just a matter of engineering to get past the hurdle.
OTOH, the increasing effect of viscosity on smaller objects in a fluid media is a known physical law. More energy might mean faster movement but that leads us to the problems of the amount of the maximum amount of energy contained in sunlight. Like Dyson stated, the energy is just not there - there's no engineering problem to solve. It would be like trying to get 5 gallons of gasoline out of a 1 gallon container.
That is what annoys me about arguments such as yours. They don't take into account what we know about the physical universe versus what people in the past thought they knew about man's engineering limitations.
Re:Brilliance... (Score:2)
Reynolds' number is proportional to the pressure stresses (forces per unit area) acting on a body divided by the viscous stresses.
Reynolds' number increases with object size and speed. Meaning, a 747's wing (long chord: call it 40 feet) operating at cruise has a Reynolds number of 10,000,000 or so, because the viscous forces are almost totally irrelevant compared to the pressure forces. Bumblebees have a wing chord of a couple millimeters, and operate at slow speeds, so the ratio of pressure forces to viscous forces is a lot smaller. That's why aerodynamic models that work really good for large flying objects totally fail to explain what's going on with bumblebees: Many aerodynamic calculations discard viscous forces as negligible because they're orders of magnitude smaller than pressure forces.
You can predict the transition from laminar to turbulent flow based on a Reynolds' number, but that doesn't necessarily mean that you couldn't have controlled flight. Bumblebees get blown around by air currents, but they still get to where they're going. If your system reacts fast (and if it's small, it can) I can imagine controlled flight even in turbulent low-Reynolds' number flows. How fast? Well, Dyson says not very, and he's awful smart, but I'd want to see more of his reasoning in order to agree with his number of millimeters/second.
On the other hand, Crichton explains that the things fly by "climbing" air molecules. He just made that shit up.
Re:video spying not feasible (Score:2)
I'd say that video spying via nanites is perfectly feasible. The whole gray-goo premise is the massive parallelism, right? So get around the wavelength limit by using several thousand or hundred thousand nanites as a sensor array.
It's like saying that "oh, bunk, one nanite could never hurt a person" when the whole point is the massive, collaborative efforts of millions of nanites.
Re:video spying not feasible (Score:2)
Any decent resolution would end up with a camera around a half millimeter across, or more.
Re:Warning: Dyson's review is a complete spoiler (Score:2)
This review appeared in the NY Review of Books? I've never seen a review in the Washington Post Book World that spoiled the entire novel before.
Warnings would have been appreciated, both in the /. writeup and the review itself.
Re:Just ridiculous! (Score:2)
-russ
Re:Just ridiculous! (Score:2)
In the case of Stalin and Mao, most deaths happened because of a combination of political science and poor economics. Both starved their populations and worked them to deaththrough improperly thought out work programs. Between them, they probably killed between 30 and 40 million people. Definitely worse than any technical means, although it took a few years longer.
Of the three quoted, only Hitler relied on technology, and without politics, he wouldn't have got there.