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Home > Events > Lectures and speeches
UNESCO: ASIA-PACIFIC SCIENCE CONFERENCE
Major issues for science in the 21st century
2 December 1998
Professor Brian D O Anderson
President, Australian Academy of Science
Ladies and Gentlemen,
thank you for inviting me today. I have been asked to talk on the Academy's
perspectives on major issues and themes for science in the region in the
early years of the 21st century.
There are really a huge number
of major issues and themes, and in the interests of fitting within the
allotted time, I decided to concentrate on two. More on those in a moment.
There are, first, two preliminary
comments to make. The first is that science is much more an activity that
is global in character rather than regional in character. This is especially
true of very broad problems. That is to say, although individuals in nations
and individuals in our region are researching science, or use the results
of science, there is not a great deal that differentiates the activities
and the goals, although there is obviously some local difference. And
when it comes to very broad problems, these tend to be problems affecting
the whole world, rather than just the region, or a nation. The second
broad comment is that progress in science, including its applications,
depends on two kinds of drivers. These are scientific research drivers,
and economic drivers. Roughly speaking scientific research drivers arise
when curiosity-motivated researchers, perhaps after uncovering a very
interesting fact, or a new way of attacking a problem, are simply challenged
by a massive intellectual problem. Economic drivers arise from applications,
where the prospect of earning money for share-holders, owners or governments
from the exploitation of new ideas is a powerful spur to the development
of these new ideas and their translation into new or improved products
and processes.
From time to time, there appears
a massive coherence between the intellectual excitement of the science
and the financial excitement of the applications potential, and then one
typically sees very major developments.
It is two of those stunning
developments about which I want to talk today. The first is the development
that we call the information revolution, and the second is the development
that we call, or soon will call, the biological or the biotechnology revolution.
Let me start with the one
that I know more about, because I am by training an electrical engineer,
and that is the information revolution.
The information revolution
for our society is as transformational as the agricultural revolution
was so long ago, and the industrial revolution of the last century. One
differentiating characteristic though, is that the revolution is taking
place or causing more transformation more rapidly than those earlier two
revolutions. The information revolution depends on three enabling technologies,
electronics, communications, and computing.
In electronics, we have seen
and we will see ever greater packing densities on integrated circuit chips,
chips containing millions of transistors. Future development of these
chips will depend on improvements in fabrication networks but also design
tools; after all it is no simple task to manipulate as part of the design
process a million transistors. For fairly obvious reasons there will need
to be advances in circuits with self-testing and limited repair capability,
there will need to be circuits with decreasing power consumption, and
we will see operation at higher and higher speeds and frequencies.
Communication has similarly
seen a whole host of changes. Last century we had Morse code. A single
cable would allow the transmission of a limited number of alphabetical
characters in a minute. Then came the telephone, and then in a series
of steps there came cables which could transmit simultaneously a number,
say 10 or even 300, telephone conversations.
Nowadays, through the miracle
of optical fibres, we have cables which can effectively carry as many
telephone conversations as you might like, and indeed we have wide-band
cables which can take many television channels simultaneously.
There has been an absolutely
staggering reduction in the price of using the telephone. When the first
international telephone calls became possible out of Australia in 1935,
to the United Kingdom, a three minute conversation cost approximately
one week's average salary. Nowadays, that same conversation will cost
about a dollar, and that is a reduction in real terms of some hundreds.
We have seen one-way radio turn into television, colour television, satellite
television with an enormous number of channels, and soon we will have
two-way video capabilities to our homes.
We have seen the explosion
of wireless and mobile telecommunications which gives an ability to island
states such as Indonesia to obtain a connectivity which could never have
been dreamt of in earlier years, and the almost-miracle of Iridium, which
allows you to make a telephone call from no matter where you are on the
planet.
In the computing area, as
so many of you would know, the storage and the speed of personal computers
have changed by a factor of a thousand over the past decade or decade
and a half. It would be impossible to imagine today banking, airline reservations,
taxation systems, the operation of supermarkets, or even the operation
of cars and washing machines, without the computer. Computers have moved
from being manipulators of purely numeric data to manipulators of alphabetic
and numeric data to be able to produce information from that data of interest,
to offer computer games, spreadsheets, wordprocessing etc. The world wide
web was undreamt of, I am sure, fifty or sixty years ago. But the scientific
and applications challenges in the IT area for the future remain extraordinary
in their dimensions. Let me report just on two as I see them.
Human-friendly interfaces
are to a large degree still lacking. You can not really give dictation
to a computer, despite the claims of software vendors. You can not really
get a computer to do automatic language translation, and you certainly
can not get it to do it on-line, or through the telephone system when
you are talking to someone in another country if they wish to use a different
language. You can not really get a computer to act as predictably as a
human in response to natural language spoken commands, except perhaps
an extremely limited set of commands. And most people would feel uncomfortable
about being asked to cooperate with a robot to do furniture removal, for
fear the robot could malfunction and deal them a smashing blow, crush
them and so on. So indeed there is a long way to go in the area of interfaces.
There are many other scientific
and applications challenges one could lay out for information technology,
but let me restrict myself just to one more.
I believe that the truly successful
companies in a decade or two will be those that have developed the meta-competence
of being able to manage knowledge.
Computers have to this point
moved from handling data to handling information, that is organised data.
In very limited domains, for example in areas of medicine and law, one
could assert that in a sense computers manipulate knowledge, as opposed
to information or organised data. No computer in any domain, however,
exhibits wisdom, the fourth level in the sequence that runs data, information,
knowledge, wisdom. The companies of the future who are really successful
will need to base much of that success on having IT systems which are
knowledgable. We see the beginnings of this sort of thing in technologies
such as datamining. But in addition to requiring the competence of extracting
knowledge from vast amounts of data, companies will need a technology
for extracting tacit knowledge of their employees, or relevant parts of
the experience of the individual employees, and putting it into an organised
framework that is systematically accessible by other individuals in the
corporation. All these ideas raise the issue that we need a scientific
theory of knowledge, which embraces issues of representation, manipulation,
and transmission between machines and between machines and human-beings.
The platform for all of this
will be electronics, communications, and computers.
To this point, I have been
focusing on the non-social aspects of the information revolution, but
it is not appropriate to leave social aspects entirely aside, and here
we might recall that the information revolution does destroy jobs in some
areas, but often creates them in others. There were no people doing the
equivalent of writing computer games as of 30 years ago. Now, this is
a big industry. Thirty years ago, many people were employed as telephone
operators. Nowadays, people are employed in call centres. Virtually every
technology, perhaps starting with the invention of the wheel, caused displacements,
and society's task is to ease the transition for individuals who may be
displaced.
There are many other social
consequences linked with the information revolution. Another one that
has been in the newspapers lately concerns Microsoft. Here is a company
who, in a very short space of time, has built up an absolutely dominant
market position. A great many people have an instinctive reaction that
Microsoft's position is too dominant to be healthy. We will have to see
how the US courts resolve that particular problem. Potentially monopolistic
industrial titans have arisen.
Super databases are now a
possibility, bringing with them privacy concerns, and worries of the big
brother state. But by the same token, a big brother state, particularly
a totalitarian regime, ought to feel very threatened by the universality
of the fax, and email, which allow the challenging of propaganda, and
the free expression of those news items and ideas that the regime might
wish to repress.
The world wide web appears
to be leading to a disintermediation of individuals like stock-brokers,
real estate agents, travel agents, and insurance-brokers and so on. The
cheapness of telephone calls seems to have led to a decline in family
letter writing, but perhaps the even cheaper and increasingly ubiquitous
email will bring back that particular skill.
In the few minutes that remain,
I would like to offer a few remarks on the second great revolution, one
that has started, but is not yet here with the same intensity as the information
revolution. That is the biological revolution. By discipline, I am much
less qualified to comment on this, and my judgements are necessarily more
cautious.
But I am convinced, especially
as a result of talking to individuals more closely involved than I, that
it will every bit as transformational for our society as has been the
information revolution.
Genetic engineering is at
least 20 years old, and in the agricultural area, there are many applications
that one can point to. Flowers, cotton, peas, seed oil and grains, the
production of all these entities has benefited from genetic engineering.
One can point to examples of genetic modification for resistance against
pests, or against viruses, or to improve quality, achieving results much
more cheaply and effectively than were possible with pesticides, weedicides,
and protracted breeding programs.
There is a prospect now of
meeting tighter and more demanding market specifications, of feeding growing
populations, through better yields, of generating wholly new products
and, very desirably, better care of our natural resources. Truly, a virtuous
circle is operative here. Further, we are all aware that much of this
technology in principle is extendable to animals and even humans.
The genetic counselling of
today may well be a precursor of the slaying of scourges like cancer,
malaria, and AIDS. There may be a prospect of the future paraplegics walking,
and sense-deficient individuals recovering through genetic engineering
their lost sense.
But once again there are a
host of social issues thrown up. Among these issues, the ones that seem
most likely to provoke the strongest public debate are those revolving
around human cloning. Individuals, to a greater or lesser degree, can
be worried about experimentation with embryos. For some individuals, no
programming of the child is acceptable. For many individuals, programming
a child to be free of a hereditary disease may be acceptable, but programming
them so they are likely to become a Nobel Prize-winning physicist is not.
And to virtually every individual, programming a child to be a genetic
copy of its parent, would seem repugnant.
People are worried about the
danger of release of a killer virus, accidentally, or by a crazed scientist,
or a dictator. They are worried about public health accidents, of the
Mad Cow Disease variety.
And just as there are problems
with aspects of the industrial structure associated with the information
revolution, so there may be with the biological revolution. There are
a limited number of multi-nationals who have acquired intellectual property
of immense potency, that will impede developments where scientists and
applied scientists since time immemorial have been used to exercising
a free hand.
The information revolution
and the biological revolution are two representatives, albeit very large
ones, of the way science impacts and challenges peoples lives. They are
much more than simply domains for the exercise of scientific research
or private sector entrepreneurship. An imperative for all nations is to
prepare the future citizens of those nations so that they can react intelligently
to these challenges.
So my final observation is
to say that the "E" for Educational in the acronym UNESCO is
immensely important here. The education process starts in the schools.
We want our schools to produce future citizens who are not just literate,
not just numerate, but scientifically literate.
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