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Taken on trust

Posted under Technology

Because engineering is now so specialised, we have to trust in engineers. Tom Hewitt responds to Lord Broers' fourth Reith Lecture.

27 Apr
2005

It’s a small world, in fact so small that we can only use our imaginations to see it.

Or we have to take someone’s word for it. Nanotechnology is breathtaking in its proportions.

I used to have a habit of taking things apart when I wanted to understand how they worked.

All very interesting until it was time to reassemble. Which way round did that rubber grommet go?! But those days are gone.

The circuit boards inside this laptop are as understandable to me as a piece of modern art. When a gadget breaks it is often simpler and cheaper to replace it than repair it.

iPod in pieces [Image: polaroidmemories under CC-BY-NC-SA] Creative Commons Image polaroidmemories via Flickr
iPod in pieces [Image: polaroidmemories under CC-BY-NC-SA]

 

This week’s lecture takes us into a world which only few people understand.

It is a great example of how a whole set of processes and products have been combined and how technological frontiers have been opened through an understanding of the very small in so many different fields.

What engineers do in there has to be taken on trust. Alec Broers touches on some of the potential hazards in some areas of nanoscience and encourages a precautionary approach.

Precaution and accountability are crucial in technological endeavour if society is to feel at ease with new generations of innovation. This is all the more important when the scale of such innovation is reduced to the unseeable.

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Publication details
Tuesday, 26th April 2005
Wednesday, 27th April 2005

Copyright information
• Body text - Copyrighted: The Open University
• Image 'iPod in pieces [Image: polaroidmemories under CC-BY-NC-SA]' - Creative-Commons: polaroidmemories via Flickr

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