Interesting People mailing list archives
IP: black holes, physics exeriments, and the end of all things
From: David Farber <farber () cis upenn edu>
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 1999 16:37:31 -0400
I quoted a bit moore than usual because I am disturbed by the section
"playing at God" The "writer" forgets the millions saved by
antibiotics and the fact that suggest it is not the Internal
Combustion engine that de-sabilizes our atmosphere. I suspect ABCnews
loves the anti-science tone of this guy.
Dave
Atlas Shrugs
Commentary
If scientists can be counted on for anything, it's for creating
unintended consequences. (Michael Dougan)
Special to ABCNEWS.com
Hoping to forestall the end of the world, I contacted Brookhaven
immediately. "We certainly do not wish to destroy the earth," sniffed
spokeswoman Diane Greenberg, who clearly has been fielding plenty of
questions like mine. Then she sent me a statement by Brookhaven Lab
Director John Marburger, entitled "On Consequences of RHIC
Operations."
"The amount of matter involved in the RHIC collisions is
exceedingly small - only a single pair of nuclei is involved in each
collision," Marburger states. "Our universe would have to be
extremely unstable in order for such a small amount of energy to
cause a large effect. On the contrary, the universe appears to be
quite stable against releases of much larger amounts of energy that
occur in astrophysical processes.
"RHIC collisions will be within the spectrum of energies
encompassed by naturally occurring cosmic radiation. The earth and
its companion objects in our solar system have survived billions of
years of cosmic ray collisions with no evidence of the instabilities
that have been the subject of speculation in connection with RHIC."
Playing at God
Why am I not reassured by this? The short answer is that the
experiment is conducted by human beings - the same folks who brought
you the internal combustion engine, which threatens to destabilize
the planet's climate, and powerful antibiotics, which ultimately
created an invincible staphylococcus bacterium. In other words,
technopride goeth before the fall.
The longer answer is that Melville's scenario is perversely
seductive in a Kubrickian sort of way. Think of Dr. Strangelove and
2001: A Space Odyssey. There are few things quite as persuasive as
the vision of humans, their thirst for knowledge and progress
insatiable, stumbling on a way to destroy the planet. It is an
end-of-the-world scenario that has launched a thousand movie scripts.
Human progress has always had a nasty habit of producing
unintended consequences - usually because the prideful progenitors of
progress insist on pooh-poohing any possibility of danger. Now, in
recreating the beginning of the universe, we are essentially playing
at being God - an unforgivable offense, punishable, as tragedians in
the Bible and other literature have prophesied for centuries, by
annihilation.
....
Fred Moody is the author of I Sing the Body Electronic: A Year with
Microsoft on the Multimedia Frontier and of The Visionary Position:
The Inside Story of the Digital Dreamers Who Made Virtual Reality a
Reality. His column appears on alternate Wednesdays.
http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/FredMoody/moody990914.html
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