We’ll Just Build a Scaffolding!

So Slashdot is wondering whether the Diamond Age is approaching. After skimming through the comments, I found not one that had anything sensible to say whatsoever. In a sense, this is cheering. It means that not one irate graduate student lost their temper and leaped into the fray. In turn, this implies that our current crop of physics and chemistry Ph.D. candidates is gifted with an uncommon dose of common sense. The future of Western Civilization is looking brighter every day.

The original source of the Slashdot post was about what one would expect. A collection of breathless press releases on the wonders and terrors of nanotechnology, the usual suspects sitting on the board, not a professional physicist or chemist in sight.

I suppose this is as good a time as any to share my Eric Drexler story. Nearly five years ago, my former employer held a large three-day symposium for its system engineers. The goal was partly education, but mostly entertainment. The seminars were divided into three categories. Category 1 was the nuts-and-bolts practical stuff. How to tune Solaris, that sort of thing. Category 2 dealt with upcoming stuff, products two to five years out (many of which are now cancelled). Category 3 was the really far-out stuff, completely non-practical, the just-for-fun stuff.

Eric Drexler was scheduled in Category 3. Naturally, I was keenly interested in hearing a popular speaker talk about my former field. As an aside: maybe it’s just me, but I love it when any expert manages to explain to a lay audience what makes their field so fascinating. It’s a hard thing to do without mangling the message, confusing the audience, or simply dumbing things down beyond recognition. When it’s done well, it’s a sight to see. Anyway, I was expecting an interesting discourse on current activity in nanotechnology, perhaps with an emphasis on future directions in computing.

Instead, what we got was nanobots.

The lecture opened with Drexler asking us to consider the strawberry. A strawberry is a fantastically complex object — and yet it’s built molecule by molecule, from carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen. If Nature can build a strawberry, why can’t we?

Drexler then observed that on the nano scale, mechanical operations are incredibly fast. (Which is true, crudely speaking.) Consider a mechanical arm in an auto factory, said Drexler. When it assembles a car, it moves with speeds on the order of meters per second. If we scale down a billion-fold, the operation of our mechanical arm speeds up commensurately. We can do orders of magnitude more operations per second.

Drexler then proceeded to show us a series of computer-generated 3-D drawings of atoms assembled into structures that looked vaguely like things you would find in an auto factory. There was a “robotic pincer arm” made from a few hundred carbon atoms. There were a number of elaborate gear-and-sprockety looking structures. The piece-de-resistance was a structure that looked a heck of a lot like a several-thousand-atom turbine. (There was no word as to whether these structures were molecularly stable, but let’s give Drexler the benefit of the doubt and assume that he had crunched the numbers correctly — that the pretty pictures weren’t simply assembled in a CAD program.)

Now, let’s review the structure of Drexler’s argument:

  1. Molecular operations are millions of times faster than the mechanical operations of a robotic arm in a factory.
  2. Here is a molecular robotic arm.
  3. Here is a set of useful-looking molecular structures.
  4. Profit!1

What made the whole experience even more irritating was Drexler’s breezy insistence that not only was the Age of Molecular Factories quite real, but that it would solve all of our current-day problems. The lecture was sprinkled with all sorts of little ruminations on what our grandchildren would think of us. For example: why were there food shortages in your day, grandfather? Why didn’t you just make more food? Or: why did you worry about global warming? Why didn’t you guys just fix it?

After stewing for the entire hour, I was determined to ask Drexler (politely) what was going on. Clearly he didn’t actually believe this nonsense. I waited until the lecture was over, introduced myself politely, and mentioned that I was a bit concerned that he had, err, glossed over the quantum mechnical issues a bit. I don’t know what I was expecting, really. Maybe a half-hearted admission that yes, he had oversimplified a bit, but you’ve got to fire up the troops somehow. That would have made me grit my teeth a bit, but I could have accepted it.

Instead, he cheerfully brushed my objection aside. Yes, maybe the intermediate quantum states would be unstable. “But we’ll just build a SCAFFOLDING!” he said.

At that point my forebrain mercifully short-circuited, forcing my autonomous social functions to take over. I vaguely remember politely shaking his hand and wandering off in a daze. Crisis averted. A couple of years later, I was gratified to dicover that in his debate with Nobel-prize winning chemist Richard Smalley, Drexler essentially proffered a fancier version of the scaffolding argument.3 So now I don’t feel quite so bad.

Anyway, we can at least draw a few lessons from all this nonsense:

  1. Science education in this country for engineers and programmers is woefully inadequate. Here we had a room of smart, very well-paid Sun engineers, and not one was anything but credulous (unless there were a few like me who were sitting there silently with steam coming out of our ears.) This is freshman chemistry, people.

  2. The appeal of Drexler’s snake oil to Silicon Valley techies is obvious. Take global hunger, which is a terrible problem that requires efforts on many fronts — scientific, political, logistical, environmental, legal, you name it. But never mind all that! In a generation or two we’ll work around all those nasty, corrupt politicians and lawyers and just make all the food we’ll ever need.

  3. Tremendous effort is being wasted discussing the non-existent benefits and non-existent risks of a non-existent technology. Meanwhile, real nanotechnology (dismissed by uninformed pundits as “nanopants”) has real (but less sexy) benefits and real (but less sexy) risks. The danger is that over time, funding will be diverted to service the Drexlerians. Fortunately, the grownups seem to be in charge. For now.

So what can be done about this? For starters, chemists and condensed-matter physicists could do a hell of a better job of educating the public on what nanotechnology really is and is not. I suspect that most Ph.Ds are reluctant to do so — partly because they think the Drexlerians are pretty harmless or even creating positive interest in the field, but mostly because they feel it really isn’t their job to wade into the messy fray. Unfortunately, this is short-sighted. Here’s one way to look at it, guys: string theorists can deal with their crackpots by simply tossing the occasional envelope or email into the trash. Meanwhile, your crackpots have well-funded institutes and get invited to fancy corporate conferences. At this point, the average engineer can’t tell the difference between you and them. Think about it.

1. Needless to say, anyone who has bothered to take a college chemistry or physics class should understand the problem with this reasoning, namely that assembling molecules is not like unto assembling automobiles. Even if we grant that Drexler’s fantastical molecular turbine is stable, the thousands of intermediate states required to assemble the turbine atom-by-atom are almost certainly not. To bring the analogy into the world of automobiles, it would be like if you remove the rearview mirror, the entire vehicle falls apart.2

2. Hmmm, would that make the Ford Pinto the world’s first quantum mechanical car? Err, anyway…

3. Unlike me, Smalley has apparently protected his brain with some sort of Stupidity Faraday Cage, which allowed him to continue his debate with Drexler without risking permanent brain damage.

5 thoughts on “We’ll Just Build a Scaffolding!

  1. I *am* sorry, Jacques — I keep meaning to make a special bright red stylesheet class just for Instapundit links, but I keep forgetting.

    What I don’t understand is, what did condensed matter physicists do to deserve this? I mean, when I was in school, I had accepted that we would always be less glamorous than the astrophysicists and the high-energy types. Okay, fine. But having to suffer from the worst crackpots in all of physics on *top* of that… well, it hardly seems fair, does it?

  2. I totally want a Stupidity Faraday Cage.

    As for the worst crackpots in physics…that’s a mighty hard claim to back up. Generic Quantum Loonies account for a large number of very high-grade crackpots; you get the We’ve Already Heard Them folks in astrophys and the World’s Gonna End If You Smash That There Atom I Proved It With This Math folks in high energy and all kinds of groovy things. What are your standards of crackpottery here?

  3. Heya M’ris.

    You and I are using different definitions of “worst”. Agreed, the Quantum Mechanics Loonies and the Free Energy Loonies are more crazy than the Nanobot Loonies. When I say “worst”, I’m talking about power and influence in the real world.

    Unlike the Free Energy people, the Nanobot People might be on the verge of actually affecting public policy. It’s gotten to the point where right now the proverbial Lay Engineer actually cannot tell the difference between Drexler and Smalley. (In fact, the lay engineer *prefers* Drexler, because as we all know, when a dried-up poopy-pants old scientist tells off a dashing, visionary scientist, the dashing, visionary scientist always wins in the end.)

    To find a field that has it worse, you have to look outside physics. Biology crackpots (Creationists) actually *are* affecting public policy. To their credit, the biologists are aware of the problem and are fighting back as best they can. Meanwhile, for reasons best known only to them, condensed matter physicists are asleep at the switch.

  4. Perhaps all the ones with active right brains went into Tech writing? The left brain isn’t fit to defend itself against a kitten with an overbite in the real world.

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