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Which field of science holds the most potential in the coming century?

yenom

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Which field of science holds the most potnetial in the coming century?

biology and genetics
Physics and engineering
nanotechnology
Space technology
medical science and health (as in like cure for cancer)
chemistry
energy development (alternative fuel source)



or something else (feel free to add a new category not on the list, either made up or realistic)


P.S how to turn this thread into a poll:)
 

kuranes

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Nanotechnology, which would apply to Biology, Chemistry etc., although Energy developments may be more of a priority at the moment, while we wait for assemblers and disassemblers.
 

Valiant

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I'd say nanotechnology. And that in turn would help a lot in many other fields, for example medicine. Biology and genetics seem to have new headlines every day, so I kind of hope that there is going to be loads of breakthroughs in gene thereapy and other areas.
 

Jack Flak

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Artificial Intelligence, because once it takes off we won't know what hit us. I'm serious.
 

ygolo

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I don't think it is going to be a field that we've named already.
It'll likely be some combination.

Nonotech and biotech are converging and influencing a lot of things rights now (including better materials, alternative energy, and fine-scale manufacturing).

Medical imaging and Computer Tomography are yielding new insights into the human body, especially the human brain. This in turn has filled the science section of book-stores with many books on the brain and the mind, as neuroscience is making great progress (backed by a co-discoverer of DNA, no less). Along with this there have been great strides in cognitive science which is tightly connected to Artificial Intelligence (which is an antiquated term for what has now become many sub-disciplines connected with things that are not necessarily confined creating an artificial form of "intelligence"-- including statistical inference, neural-networks, Fuzzy Logic, multi-modal formal reasoning, Modern Control Theory, pattern recognition, Human-Computer Interaction, Semantic Networks, ...).

I think Automation (Industrial, Corporate, and Domestic) is something that has had great potential for a long time. Imagine being a business owner simply having to do minimal maintenance to a "machine" that takes and fulfills orders--complete with custom manufacturing, automated delivery, and collection/analysis of customer feedback. But out labor market would go through a temporary crisis in "unskilled" work if an industry focused on automating everything were to flourish.

Right now information is cheap and getting cheaper exponentially, while energy remains about as expensive as it has always been (if not getting more expensive). So I think the greater potential is there for some break-through in energy.

Whether or not we'll have one is a different question.

We may only be able to make things slightly cheaper (long-run, remember we've passed peak-oil) with the use of 4-th generation nuclear, solar ink/paint, oil shale, and fuel-cell cell technology, hybrid and electric vehicles to use less of our scarce oil and more of our grid (mostly powered by coal).
 
S

Sniffles

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Artificial Intelligence, because once it takes off we won't know what hit us. I'm serious.

Not really. AI is in many ways leading itself into a corner.

I agree with ygolo on the basic concept that it's probably going to achievements in various fields that'll mark the next century. Although the exact nature of those achievements is what I dispute.

Probably what concerns me most is whether or not scientific research and development is moving along routes guided by proper philosophical underpinnings. I'm very concerned that it isn't, and hasn't been for quite some time.

We have the mistaken concept that science is some autonomous field that goes by its own rules, irregardless of everybody else. That's not true. Science is a means to an end, not an end to itself. What is the exact nature of the ends we wish for science to achieve. We're not engaging in proper discussions about that. We confuse science with scientism.

Frederich Nietzsche made an important point about this in On the Genealogy of Morals:

"Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as science ‘without presuppositions’…a ‘faith’ must always be there first of all, so that science can acquire from it a direction, a meaning, a limit, a method – a right to exist…It is still a metaphysical faith that underlies our faith in science."
 

kuranes

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Artificial Intelligence, because once it takes off we won't know what hit us. I'm serious.

Nano and AI will blend into one thing after a while, as we will use one to create the other. Micromachines also means micro-"computers".
 

ajblaise

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Yeah nanotech hands down. Maybe physics if there are any serious breakthroughs.
 

Valiant

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I'd like to see cold fusion and hyperspace travel :D
 

yenom

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I was thinking neuroscience and robotics, which i forgot to add.
There is quantum computering also

I think Automation (Industrial, Corporate, and Domestic) is something that has had great potential for a long time. Imagine being a business owner simply having to do minimal maintenance to a "machine" that takes and fulfills orders--complete with custom manufacturing, automated delivery, and collection/analysis of customer feedback. But out labor market would go through a temporary crisis in "unskilled" work if an industry focused on automating everything were to flourish.


I entirely agree.

I'd like to see cold fusion and hyperspace travel

To dream is easy, to make it happen and get involved is hard.
How many of us get to be in jobs that develops cutting edge technologies?
 

yenom

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I have a hunch the first AI breakthroughs will happen in Japan, not the U.S.
Japan is really advanced in the field of robotics.

PS this thread is just a brainstorm of which science i should go into in university.

and how do you turn this thread into a poll?:huh:
 

Jack Flak

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If you didn't know, AI and robotics are two completely separate fields. --Mr. FYI
 

rhinosaur

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Most of the interesting new developments are (not surprisingly) happening at the interfaces of the fields you list. For example, my own research combines nanotechnology, engineering, physics, and chemistry. Some of my associates are at the interface of nanotechnology, engineering, and biochemistry.

The boundaries between the fields are artificial and useless, except for taking classes. To excel in science, you've got to incorporate all kinds of techniques and technologies.
 

Virtual ghost

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From objective viewpoint.
I think that there is noway of telling that, from our current perspective.
 

Jasz

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i also hope that collaboration across disciplines will be supported by (further) improved analytics, data mining and data sharing
 

kuranes

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From objective viewpoint.
I think that there is noway of telling that, from our current perspective.
Of course not. We're just speculating here. The period of time in question is so long - an entire century. Considering the rate that technology speeds along, further empowering us to speed along, it may turn out that some kind of applied Neuro-Psychology becomes more important than any "technology" ( as conceived of as being a manipulation of things outside of "us" ) as we finally start getting into the nitty gritty of our own minds studying themselves, and thus our real motivations and the implications thereof.
 

Lateralus

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Most potential? Potential for what? Immortality (or something close to it) would alter civilization more than anything else, so I'm going to say genetics/biology/nanotechnology.
 
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