日本語
 
Privacy Policy ポリシー/免責事項
  詳細検索ブラウズ

アイテム詳細


公開

書籍の一部

Global Risk Assessment

Authors
/persons/resource/283

Renn,  Ortwin
0 Pre-IASS, IASS Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies Potsdam;

URL
There are no locators available
フルテキスト (公開)
There are no public fulltexts stored in RIFSpublic
付随資料 (公開)
There is no public supplementary material available
引用

Renn, O. (2016). Global Risk Assessment. In W. S., Bainbridge, & M. C., Roco (Eds.), Handbook of Science and Technology Convergence (pp. 573-590). Cham: Springer International Publishing.


引用: https://publications.rifs-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_4515899
要旨
Scientists and engineers have long been aware of the tension between narrow specialization and multidisciplinary cooperation, but now a major transformation is in process that will require technical fields to combine far more effectively than formerly in the service of human benefit. This handbook will catalog all the ways this can be accomplished and the reasons it must be. Nature is a single coherent system and diverse methods of scientific and engineering investigations should reflect this interlinked and dynamic unity. Accordingly, general concepts and ideas should be developed systematically in interdependence, with cause-and-effect pathways, for improved outcomes in knowledge, technology and applications. At the same time, industrial and social applications rely on integration of disciplines and unification of knowledge. Thus, convergence is both a fundamental principle of nature and a timely opportunity for human progress. This handbook will represent the culmination of fifteen years of workshops, conferences and publications that initially explored the connections between nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology and new technologies based on cognitive science. A constant emphasis on human benefit then drew in the social sciences, even as shared scientific and ethical principles brought in sustainability of the Earth environment and the challenge of equitable economic advancement. The intellectual contributions of literally hundreds of scientists and engineers established a number of research methods and analytical principles that could unite disparate fields. The culmination has been called Convergence of Knowledge and Technology for the benefit of Society (CKTS), defined as the escalating and transformative interactions among seemingly different disciplines, technologies, communities and domains of human activity to achieve mutual compatibility, synergism and integration.