Nanotechnology

Nanotechnology developments

anotechnology is a relatively new field of research and scientific development. It has been speculated about for decades and the wonders and advantages of nanotechnology have been extolled by many. But not all.

The scientific community, in its never ending quest for information and knowledge, consistently fails to seriously acknowledge the dangers of “invisible” technology, such as nanotechnology, going haywire. Nothing is ever to go wrong according to them yet it always does somehow.

In this respect, nanotechnology is not different from other new disciplines. We, as humans, don’t seem to have the capacity to really learn to understand something before we start to mess with it on a big scale.

And when things do go wrong – just imagine an autodidactic nano-intelligence on the loose – we end up fighting the symptoms, pointing fingers at each other, and deny any or all culpability.

Forethought of possible consequences is usually far from our minds as we are caught up, or pushed by superiors, to make the research investment profitable as soon as possible.

Having said that, nanotechnology is a fast developing field. Keeping up to date with its developments is necessary if you are serious about gaining knowledge in this field.

New discoveries and uses are made frequently and from all over the academic and commercial world. Research results, applications and products are being published and marketed continuously.

While it’s not difficult to imagine the dangers of nanotechnology, we should also acknowledge its positive potential.

Money seems to be all that matters these days, and so it is with nanotechnology. It will need to prove itself in the boardroom as much as the laboratory otherwise it will go the way of other developments that failed the “money test” and disappear into the archives and filing cabinets of the world.

But nanotechnology does have very dangerous potential, and we should be very careful with it.