Waubonsee Community College

The synthetic age, outdesigning evolution, resurrecting species, and reengineering our world, Christopher J. Preston

Label
The synthetic age, outdesigning evolution, resurrecting species, and reengineering our world, Christopher J. Preston
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The synthetic age
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1004013008
Responsibility statement
Christopher J. Preston
Sub title
outdesigning evolution, resurrecting species, and reengineering our world
Summary
Imagining a future in which humans fundamentally reshape the natural world using nanotechnology, synthetic biology, de-extinction, and climate engineering.0We have all heard that there are no longer any places left on Earth untouched by humans. The significance of this goes beyond statistics documenting melting glaciers and shrinking species counts. It signals a new geological epoch. In The Synthetic Age, Christopher Preston argues that what is most startling about this coming epoch is not only how much impact humans have had but, more important, how much deliberate shaping they will start to do. Emerging technologies promise to give us the power to take over some of Nature's most basic operations. It is not just that we are exiting the Holocene and entering the Anthropocene; it is that we are leaving behind the time in which planetary change is just the unintended consequence of unbridled industrialism. A world designed by engineers and technicians means the birth of the planet's first Synthetic Age.0Preston describes a range of technologies that will reconfigure Earth's very metabolism: nanotechnologies that can restructure natural forms of matter; "molecular manufacturing" that offers unlimited repurposing; synthetic biology's potential to build, not just read, a genome; "biological mini-machines" that can outdesign evolution; the relocation and resurrection of species; and climate engineering attempts to manage solar radiation by synthesizing a volcanic haze, cool surface temperatures by increasing the brightness of clouds, and remove carbon from the atmosphere with artificial trees that capture carbon from the breeze. 0What does it mean when humans shift from being caretakers of the Earth to being shapers of it? And in whom should we trust to decide the contours of our synthetic future? These questions are too important to be left to the engineers
Table Of Contents
Making new matter -- Repositioned atoms -- DNA on demand -- Artificial organisms -- Ecosystems to order -- Relocating and resurrecting species -- The evolutionary power of cities -- How to turn back the sun -- Re-mixing the atmosphere -- Synthetic humanity -- The transitional moment
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources