STS Module 2
STS Module 2
laboratory experiences
- compounds responsive to variations in
- how does science and technology reflect in the bacterial composition (specificity issue)
What is Technology?
ages
- science advancements -> technology
- Toffler’s waves of technology (The Third - e.g. internet -> wireless, apps, online deliveries
Wave, 1980)
- demand pull (Schmookler, 1966)
of everyone)
- exploring both supply-side R&D and market
- Universalism (for the benefit of everyone research
for self-interest)
- tech-push: miniaturization, improvements in
- Organized Skepticism (undergoes programming and algorithms
ideals brought about by the Scientific - science and technological innovation as product of
Revolution
social groups vs influenced by subjective, individual
- Science as a social construction
actions
- constructivist perspective
- heavily influenced by local space and time
Structural Perspectives
and response of relevant social groups and - society as a complex system working
pertinent social contexts (Pinch and Bijker, together to promote stability — stability by
1984)
consensus
- Example: The Penny-Farthing Bicycle (design has - Science as Part of the Complex System
many flaws [no breaks, hard to balance], but it’s the - role: as a means of understanding nature,
prototype of modern bicycles)
it seeks to bridge different forms of
- Example: Antibiotics
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knowledge across nations and groups in Example: (Agent-based Perspectives)
2. Social Conflict
- utilitarian perspective
- French liberalism, Marxist tradition
- food as basic physiological need
- Society as a system composed of groups with - when is utility maximized in food consumption
- role: ensure that a powerful group - why do we have these kinds of technologies?
- functionalist perspective
- for science majors
- conflict perspective
- theoretical and applied underpinnings of the
- corporate control?
discipline
- Symbolic interactionism: everything has a - any technological application that uses biological
meaning
systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof,
- social phenomenon is the totality of to make or modify products or processes for specific
meaningful interactions between individuals
use
meaningful sense —-
- Punnett Square (recessive/dominant and
2. Utilitarianism homozygous/heterozygous)
capital)
- James Watson & Francis Crick: chemical structure
- ???/??
of DNA as a double helix
- role: as a means of understanding nature, - codons (three nucleotide bases) translated into
it helps in discerning whether a decision amino acids
would yield the most benefits for the - e.g. cancer - changes in the genetic code
majority of people involved
(proliferate and increase)
- technological innovation as either tools that help - Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer: recombinant
with creating rational choice, or produces that DNA technology
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- Kary Mullis: DNA amplification through Polymerase 4. Science and Technology is our fix for world killers
Chain Reaction (PCR)
(infectious disease, cancer, inflammatory diseases)
- genes from the DNA of one species are - life expectancy at birth: measures deaths from birth
extracted and artificially forced into the to old age
2. Evolution
- e.g. Dolly, the cloning of a sheep (1996)
- Social determinants
- social animals live longer
FUTURE OF MEDICINE
1. Pneumonia
2. Tuberculosis
Major Points
3. Diarrhea
1. We live longer
2. This happens by evolution and through Science *Infectious diseases were the major killers (leprosy
and Technology
and small pox)
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Causes of Death in 2015 and 2014
Inflammation
1. heart diseases
- root cause of many illnesses
2. cancer
- atherosclerosis: narrowing of blood vessels caused
3. chronic lower respiratory diseases
by fat and calcium, leading to reduced blood flow,
causing heart attack / stroke
illness
2. statins
3. anti-hypertensives
- gene editing
Ehrlich, Domagk, Fleming: Magic Bullets - organ regeneration: removing organs with
- antibiotics: syphilis, infected wounds
infections / disease
- personalized diagnostics
- addressed through handwashing (before 3. the patient is treated and their response to
assisting in the delivery of babies)
therapy is monitored
John Snow and Epidemiology - materials and devices developed within the
- cholera: water-borne disease
nanometer scale (1nm to 500nm)
- he identified the cause of the cholera outbreak - tools and phenomena manifested within nanometer
through looking at patterns
scale (through the collaboration of chemistry,
- traced the source to a single water source (water physics, engineering, and biology)
pump)
- nanowires: shrink or pull a material too thin in both
width and length
Cancer
- nanotubes: shrink a material to make it short and
- diagnosed more and more as populations age
stubby
- Cancer diagnosis: catching it earlier means living - nanosheet / nanofilm: flatten a material too thin
longer
- nanoparticle: any material that’s less than 100nm in
- Cancer Treatment: The Range of Possibilities
dimension
- radiation
- nanodot: 1-10nm in diameter
- hormonal therapy
- surgery
Two Ways of Developing Nanotechnology
- chemotherapy
1. Bottom-up Synthesis: building up structures from
- targeted therapy
the separated atoms
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Uses of Nanotechnology
- the menu suggests the personae of what we eat and
1. energy - efficient ICT
do not eat
- energy
- nutritious food are only secondary considerations
- ICT
What Are We Worried of? - widening gap between rich and poor
- unknown long-term effects of nanotechnology on - disparity in consumer demand and actual purchases
What Can Be Done? - food choices are increasingly being called on to act
1. risk-assessment as tools for social change
- food represents
- differences in gender
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- rational thinking governed by precise “laws of
2.5 Artificial Intelligence: A Balancing Act
thought”
- syllogisms
could deceive a human into believing that it was - systems (in theory) can solve problems using such
human.” — Alan Turing, 1950
laws
“Of course machines can be intelligent. Computers are Systems Acting Rationally
able to solve complex mathematical equations, why - building systems that carry out actions to achieve
would one even cast doubt on the intelligence of the best outcome
machines?”
- rational behavior
equations?
the problem at hand, a true judgment on the 1. Philosophy: logic, mind, knowledge
- John McCarthy (1955): Can machines be made to 6. Control Theory: stable feedback systems
- definitions of AI vary
- think rationally
- act rationally
[insert diagram]
answers
- system providing the answers passes the test if Machine Learning: Classifiers
interrogator cannot tell whether the answers - classifier: system that categorizes instances
- “rational” -> ideal intelligence (contrast with human - how about finding out what the categories are?
intelligence)
(clustering — could be unsupervised learning)
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Value of Data as Input
us from repetitive and monotonous tasks within a
- the classifier, the clusterer, the predictor, etc. is a job
program that implements a machine learning - instead of being replaced, the human aspect of the
algorithm
job will be given more time to address the
- the machine learning algorithm needs data as input interactions involved in human relationships in the
- the more data that is fed into the algorithm, the more context of the job, as well as perform human duties
reliable the results are
of critical thinking, leading to creative problem
solving
Agent-based AI
- agent: anything that perceives and acts on its The Responsibility
environment
- the balance between artificial intelligence and
- AI: study of rational agents
human intelligence in the workplace, or in popular
- a rational agent carries out an action with the best parlance, the balance between “robots and
outcome after considering past and current humans,” is achieved with conscious effort
percepts
- despite what research has been telling us, it is true
that machines are indeed replacing the entire jobs,
AI Agent
rather than automating specific tasks within a job. It
[insert diagram]
is both the responsibility of the work-providing forces
of society and AI architects to progress this AI trend
Types of Agents [insert diagrams]
by achieving the synergy that humans and machines
1. reflex agent: involuntarily; once you have an input, can produce together, rather than have total
you will expect a particular output; sensors will replacements in the context of employment
3. goal-based agent: there are goals; certain - AI is used to predict contamination levels
responses are expected
given current data
conflict situations
- taking the form of machine learning and/or agent-
based automatons, AI is now considered to be
Counter-Argument
ubiquitous
- artificial intelligence, may it be in the form of software - with AI incrementally penetrating the human lifestyle,
tools or robotics, can and will most probably relieve it is not without its benefits and consequences. The
goal for automation does contribute to the threat
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against the human workforce in varying degrees.
However, we must not forget that the control and
regulation of current and emerging AI-based
technologies are responsibilities set upon us