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C00002 00002 IN DEFENSE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
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IN DEFENSE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Science and technology have come in for a new wave of
criticism recently. I propose to discuss what is this criticism, who
is criticizing, what validity does the criticism have, and what ought
to be done. In this article, I shall mainly confine myself to
stating opinions for the benefit of those to whose world-views these
opinions might appeal in the hopes that they will be inspired to
appropriate action. Lack of space precludes extensive attempts to
convince people holding entirely different views.
The first criticism is that scientists and especially
engineers are inferior plastic people. No doubt scientists and
engineers have tendencies to faults characteristic of the group, but
no worse than other groups. In the main, these criticisms raise
differences in taste to the level of morality and are themselves on
the moral level of race and class prejudice.
The second criticism is that technology has made some
fundamental mistake - either technological civilization is bad for
human beings or it is destroying the planet or both. We distinguish
this view from opinions that various specific mistakes have been
made, but the system as a whole can be salvaged. The view must also
be distinguished from the Marxist view that technology is OK, but
capitalism has to be clobbered.
The main counter argument against the view that technological
civilization is bad for human beings is the observation that
migration is predominantly away from less technologically advanced
areas towards the more advanced. Even the vocal detractors of
technology rarely move away from it. Perhaps much of the nostalgia
for earlier times comes from identifying with the wealthy of earlier
times about whom most of the novels are written. It would be nice to
have faithful and obsequious servants. Thus the cry against the size
of the University of California may be regarded as a protest against
equality of opportunity, for most of the growth of the university has
come from the increasing proportion of youth getting higher education
and not from population increase. (Those of us who find the academic
world getting crowded should imagine what will happen when the 800
million Chinese start writing a share of the world's scientific
literature proportional to their population). We must learn to live
with the consequences of equality of opportunity.
There is a widespread though not universal belief that the
world is getting worse and that technology is to blame. Much of it
seems to be simple misperception founded on tendencies to self pity.
It is said that the air is unbreathable, the water is undrinkable,
and it is increasingly difficult to drive anywhere. I was particularly
struck by one Stanford professor's remark that he can't remember when
he was last able to see Mount Hamilton from the Stanford campus. In
fact, while smog is not getting better yet, it is far less unpleasant
than the soot of soft coal burning cities, and the actual travel
times of many routes in the Bay Area have been reduced (280 is very
pleasant to drive on), and Mount Hamilton can be seen from Stanford
at least 3/4 of the time.
In short, the perception that things are getting worse contradicts
both the statistics of living standards and longevity as well as
direct observation. I have found that this perception is very soft
in that it yields readily to argument in contrast to other beliefs
that intellectuals hold.
The ecological criticism that technology is destroying the
planet is harder to answer, because to answer it fully requires
proving that each of a large number of potential disasters will be
avoided including disasters not yet even imagined. After
considerable study of the literature, my own conclusions are the
following:
1. Population must be limited. The U.S. could postpone this
limitation for 100 years and still live well off resources from
within its own borders. In other countries the problem is more
acute, but they have to see the problem themselves as they in fact
are; neither by precept nor by example nor by pressure can we make
them do it. About the most we can do is help with technology.
2. It is easy to see trends that if continued will bring
about disaster, but our scientific and political ability to spot
these trends and take action before they kill people has been
increasing. Ancient ecological disasters where a population starved
because it destroyed its food supply or populations were reduced by
epidemics are not occurring. The prophets of doom have played an
important role in this servo-mechanism, and it is a major defect of
our society that prophecy of disaster has been required to cause
action. Prophets of good news like us facile technological optimists
have a hard time getting attention, because we admit that mankind
will survive even if it doesn't follow our advice.
3. There can be enough energy, food, and materials to bring
even twice the present world population to twice the American level
of affluence.
To prove this would be quite difficult and lengthy, because each
resource would have to be examined separately and its adequacy or
substitutability established. To prove the contrary is even harder,
because it is difficult to limit other people's ingenuity in solving
problems.
4. When we modify the workings of nature, there are
side-effects which require additional action, and these actions have
further side-effects. So far it has turned out that the systems have
been convergent. Controlling the side-effects is easier than going
back to the old way, and the secondary side-effects are less
important than the primary ones. As a computer scientist, I tend to
expect programs to be eventually debugged even if the process is
lengthy and inconvenient.
These optimistic views are based on a different reading of
recent history than the extreme critics. For example, I regard the
automobile as having turned out successful in the main. The freedom
it has given the individual to live where he wants and have friends
where he wants is worth the inconveniences, and I believe the smog
problem will be solved by any of several of the approaches being
tried.
Well, if we scientist and engineers are so good, why doesn't
everybody love us? Is it just bad public relations? In my opinion, the
trouble is that we haven't done much for the middle class lately
except enlarge it. Far from having created future shock by changing
the world too much, we have done much less recently than was done
around the turn of the century. Consider that in the 50 years
preceding 1920, technology produced the telephone, electric lights,
refrigeration, the automobile, the airplane, and radio. The
important recent innovations in daily life have been television and
the pill. The others have allowed more people to enjoy the goodies
of previous technology by increasing productivity, but evidently this
is not enough to save us from criticism.
Why haven't we done more recently? Three reasons.
1. At the request of the people through the government, we
spent our time fighting menaces rather than inventing good things.
For a long time the menace was presumed to be military, and so we
invented lots of weapons. Now they are less interested in weapons
which may be good if possibly risky.
The conservative ideology that objects to government
subsidy of technology except when there is a menace involved didn't
help. (Remember that the Federal Highway Program was justified on
the grounds of national defense).
The current menace is pollution; the problem is important and will
be solved, but we should not expend all our thought on menaces; making
positive improvements should get even more attention.
2. The mine of easy mechanical invention was exhausted.
Dishwashers and refrigerators are easy; a real house-cleaning machine
will require the use of a computer. We are about ready for a new
wave of invention affecting daily life mostly involving the use of
computers. Let me tell (not now) you about the home computer terminal,
computer driven cars, automatic home delivery systems, the
elimination of money, and the national jukebox, and the personal
telephone.
3. The over-selling of pure science especially among
potential scientists. The selling of pure science started when
science consumed an infinitesimal proportion of the GNP and occupied
a vey small portion of the very intelligent people. The case for
increasing its support was quite valid. The present situation where
practical application is looked down on, especially in the
under-developed countries is quite different. One visits institutes
in these countries that are at the forefront of world science, but
which make very little contribution to the advancement of their
countries. The same situation prevails in the United States, but is
hidden, because we don't know what people would have invented had
they tried. The aspect of the Chinese Cultural Revolution in which
scientists were criticized for their remoteness from the country's
problems was justified. This is not to say that the remedies adopted
will necessarily work. (They didn't).
Scientists and technologists are worried about unemployment
and manpower statisticians say there are too many of us. In fact,
there is plenty of work, even if we can't all follow exactly in the
footsteps of our professors. Specifically, we need to figure out how
to reduce the cost of construction by a factor of three so the
country can be rebuilt, we need to figure out how to have the
mobility of the car without the traffic jams and the smog, we need to
figure out how to get all that boring office work done by computer,
we need to figure out how to get and use energy without pollution.
Most of all, we need to invent ways of making life better and not
merely respond to threats of disaster.
The economists had better figure out how we can get the
benefits of all these changes without mass unemployment.