Friday, April 11, 2014

April 4, 2014: The Privileged Position of Science

As science and technology shrinks in scale and increases in complexity, a question is raised as to who really benefits from these high-tech advancements. The history of technology waves would suggest that major new technologies initially demean marginalized people and allow the wealthy to anticipate, manipulate, and prosper from technological bursts (Etcgroup, pg. 4). The reason for this is because people with financial means are able to sustain themselves, regardless of the success of the technological advancement, while the rest suffer. Nanotechnology and technological convergence in particular has the potential to bring about staggering societal effects and raise serious threats to human rights and our democracy. Technological convergence is defined as derivation of fundamental building blocks of all sciences from nano-engineered materials. The utilization of complex technology, such as nanotechnology, is inherently inclined to satisfy the rich and leave everyone else helpless.

Economically, nanotechnology has the ability to "topple commodity markets, disrupt trade and the livelihoods of the poorest and most vulnerable workers who do not have the economic flexibility to respond to sudden demands for new skills or different raw materials" (Etcgroup, pg. 4). As mentioned in "The Accountability of Science and Engineering", though developments in technology have the ability to provide for and benefit the less fortunate, this is accomplished by destroying all competitors that are unable to financially support newer, more expensive machinery, laborers of higher skill level, and any other products needed to sustain the facility.

Furthermore, if the new nano-engineered material can be produced at a lower cost and outperform a conventional material, it is reasonable to expect that the nanomaterial will replace the conventional commodity (Etcgroup, pg. 4). This monopolizes the industry and gives an excess of power to those that have the resources to manipulate and create those nano-engineered materials. As raw materials are broken down to the nano-scale, a convergence of diverse technologies becomes possible. "As the Wall St. Journal puts it, 'companies that hold pioneering patents could potentially put up tolls on entire industries" (Etcgroup, pg. 7). The livelihoods of manual laborers and their families in our own country in addition to third world countries that provide us with raw materials would be put in jeopardy with the ability to simply spawn materials with nano-materials.

A long term goal of the US government is to eventually improve human performance in all aspects of daily life. If this aspiration is achieved, then the government risks the exacerbation of the already increasing rift between those who will be "improved" through technological convergence and those who will be left "unimproved" either by choice or lack of choice (Etcgroup, pg. 9). It is at this point that scientists, engineers, and political powers must seriously address who really benefits from extreme advancements of technology and whether those lives are worth more than the ones left behind.

References

ETC Group. "A Tiny Primer on Nano-scale Technologies and 'The Little Bang Theory'". ETC Group. June 2005. Web. 4 April 2014. 

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