From: Max More (maxmore@primenet.com)
Date: Sat Aug 15 1998 - 17:28:53 MDT
The new issue of Business Week (August 31 cover date) is a special double
issue on the 21st Century Economy. The issue focuses on the effects of
advanced technologies on the economy.
Sample quotation:
"Going somewhat further out [compared to MEMS]--probably 15 to 20
years--high-tech visionaries foresee a transition that's far more radical
and disruptive. Its quintessence won't be smaller, cheaper, faster
electroniccs--though we will have all that in abundance. The transition
scientists speak of involves nothing less than the hijacking of nature's
own creative machinery.
In medicine, this spells the ability to repair or replace the body's
failing organs. In manufacturing, it means coercing molecules to asemble
into useful devices--the same way that crystals and living creatures
assemble themselves. The coming wave of miniaturization and molecular
electronics--sometimes called "nanotechnology"--is taking shape at the
intersection of chemistry, physics, biology, and electrical engineering.
And if it crests as many scientists predict, it will bring a wholesale
industrial transformation, more dramatic than the late-20th century
flowering of microelectronics." (p.80)
This article, and others on various high-tech topics including
biotechnology, don't stop at these general observations, but identify
specific pathways and possibilities.
Once again, Business Week confirms the mainstreaming of extropian thinking.
Max
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Max More, Ph.D.
more@extropy.org (soon also: <max@maxmore.com>)
http://www.primenet.com/~maxmore
Consulting services on the impact of advanced technologies
President, Extropy Institute:
exi-info@extropy.org, http://www.extropy.org
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