The major press was all over a study that
came out a couple weeks ago observing carbon nanotubes and C60 buckyballs (or
fullerenes) to have potential carcinogenic pathologies.
But this week, a major story was released showing that, although engineered nanomaterials can be transferred up the lowest levels of the food chain from single-celled organisms to higher, multicelled ones, the amount transferred was relatively low, and there was no evidence of the nanomaterials concentrating in the higher-level organisms. But in the mainstream media, that coverage was, well, MIA.
Fear and greed sell, not facts. Once again, it’s the curse of marketing over science—unless you’re talking about psychology over chemistry, I guess.
My theory is more people loved to be scared by the unknown than to explore it and learn from it. Granted, that approach likely has a great deal of merit when attempting to keep you and your tribe alive. And natural selection likely gives a nod to the safety seekers over the curious.
But fire wasn’t tamed by the handwringers. And exploring the boundaries of science isn’t for the meek.
I guess the underlying issue is, most people—especially those who don’t don lab coats to go to work—don’t like change and find it somewhat foreboding to have to learn a new skill set and wrap their busy minds around a whole new concept.
But that’s only if it’s a vague concept. siRNA inhibitors are boring unless you know they can cure cancer.
nanotech is weird unless it makes computers faster or makes
iPods—or kills you.
I talked to green builder and local solar power proponent who, when I mentioned I cover
Nanotech, said “Oh yeah, I just read that story how those nanotubes can kill you.” Score one for our nonscience-based media.
First of all, the study saw more issues with buckyballs than carbon nanotubes. Second, the study was so preliminary relative to the issues with which it’s grappling that it’s going to take 20 more studies to prove or disprove these initial observations.
All it means, even if it’s really true, is the production facilities need to be monitored (which is already being done) and the end products may not be able to have biological applications. But that doesn’t exclude deposition technologies or other nonbiological applications. Plus, there are plenty of other nanotubes not fashioned from carbon.
What’s more, this
new, underreported and somewhat conflicting study demonstrates the need to look at this burgeoning field scientifically and not emotionally. If we decide to let our fears paralyze us from exploiting the opportunities of
nanotechnology in a few decades, we’ll look like an underdeveloped tribe compared to the expanding knowledge and stature of countries who are aggressively dealing with the scientific, ethical and societal challenges that come with such an enormously transcendent technology as nanotech.
But they’re following the science, not their fears.
Speaking EngagementsMy
colleagues at
KCI Communications Inc.,
Neil George, Roger Conrad and
Elliott Gue, will be heading west Aug. 7-10, 2008, to attend the San
Francisco Money Show, where they’ll discuss infrastructure,
partnerships, utilities, resources and energy, and tell you what to buy
and what to sell in 2008.
Click here or
call 800-970-4355 and refer to priority code 011470 to attend as their guest.
GS Early
Gregg Early is vice-president of
KCI Communications and
executive editor of the company’s flagship publication, Personal Finance.
Over
the past decade, he has helped build the newsletter’s reputation as a trusted
source for penetrating market analysis and investment advice that subscribers
can take to the bank. He also oversees the editorial department’s other
award-winning publications.
But Gregg’s responsibilities
and interests are not purely administrative. Always forward-looking, he found
his niche reporting on the frontiers of technology: high-temperature
superconducting, alternative energy, intelligence infrastructure, as well as
advances in the nanotech and biotech sectors. For those willing to follow him
back to the future, he pens The Real
Nanotech Investor, a financial advisory that focuses on how individual
investors can capitalize on innovations in nanotech and disruptive
technologies. Gregg’s free e-zine, Nanotech
Investing News, keeps readers updated on the latest advances and
developments in these nascent sectors and, more importantly, the opportunities
therein.
Prior to joining KCI, Gregg
honed his journalistic chops reporting on a variety of topics including
finance, health care and education. He is also a respected gastronome and chef
as well as a published poet and playwright. He’s a graduate of James Madison
University.
View all articles by GS Early