Technology is a process and a body of knowledge as much as a collection of artifacts. Biology is no different—and we are just beginning to comprehend the challenges inherent in the next stage of biology as a human technology. It is this critical moment, with its wide-ranging implications, that Robert Carlson considers in Biology Is Technology. He offers a uniquely informed perspective on the endeavors that contribute to current progress in this area—the science of biological systems and the technology used to manipulate them. In a number of case studies, Carlson demonstrates that the development of new mathematical, computational, and laboratory tools will facilitate the engineering of biological artifacts—up to and including organisms and ecosystems. Exploring how this will happen, with reference to past technological advances, he explains how objects are constructed virtually, tested using sophisticated mathematical models, and finally constructed in the real world. Such rapid increases in the power, availability, and application of biotechnology raise obvious questions about who gets to use it, and to what end. Carlson’s thoughtful analysis offers rare insight into our choices about how to develop biological technologies and how these choices will determine the pace and effectiveness of innovation as a public good. (20100301)
Author(s): Robert H. Carlson
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 290
Contents
......Page 6
Acknowledgments
......Page 8
1. What Is Biology?
......Page 10
2. Building with Biological Parts
......Page 17
3. Learning to Fly (or Yeast, Geese, and 747s)
......Page 29
4. The Second Coming of Synthetic Biology
......Page 42
5. A Future History of Biological Engineering
......Page 59
6. The Pace of Change in Biological Technologies
......Page 72
7. The International Genetically Engineered Machines Competition
......Page 90
8. Reprogramming Cells and Building Genomes
......Page 106
9. The Promise and Peril of Biological Technologies
......Page 117
10. The Sources of Innovation and the Effects of Existing and Proposed Regulations
......Page 140
11. Laying the Foundations for a Bioeconomy
......Page 159
12. Of Straitjackets and Springboards for Innovation
......Page 187
13. Open-Source Biology, or Open Biology?
......Page 209
14. What Makes a Revolution?
......Page 227
Afterword
......Page 249
Notes
......Page 252
Index
......Page 276