| ] Ralph Merkle, a Foresight founder who is now director of] the Georgia Tech Information Security Center, says the
 ] group has always known its set of guidelines for nanotech
 ] regulation - really, a set of self-regulatory
 ] measures that ensure human control over nanotech -
 ] would not apply to real nanotechnology for decades. But
 ] one of Foresight's objectives is that there is adequate
 ] public discussion "well in advance of reality."
 ]
 ] "I think that one of the things that happens in any
 ] discourse about some complex subject is you get a lot of
 ] confusion," Merkle said. "That's part and parcel of the
 ] process, and so what you want to do is start the
 ] discussion early, and as time goes by the confusion
 ] gradually settles down. In other words, people make wild
 ] statements. Fine. They make statements that aren't
 ] accurate. Fine.
 ]
 ] "As time goes on, people will look back and see what was
 ] accurate and not."
 This is an interesting discussion of nanoethics that has general implications for discussions of bioethics. Small Times: NanoEthics |