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kilmie polanski kilmie polanski is offline
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Old Jun 10th, 2003, 05:11 PM        Apocalypse Now?
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...s_dc&printer=1

British Scientist Puts Odds for Apocalypse at 50-50
Mon Jun 9,12:12 PM ET Add Science - Reuters to My Yahoo!


By Deena Beasley

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - This is the way the world might end: A genetically engineered pathogen is released, debris from an erupting "supervolcano" blocks the sun or scientists in the biggest "bioerror" of them all accidentally trigger a matter-squeezing "big bang."


The demise of civilization has been predicted since it began, but the odds of keeping Planet Earth alive and well are getting worse amid a breakneck pace of scientific advances, according to Martin Rees, Britain's honorary astronomer royal.


Rees calculates that the odds of an apocalyptic disaster striking Earth have risen to about 50 percent from 20 percent a hundred years ago.


The 60-year-old scientist, author of the recently published "Our Final Hour," says science is advancing in a far more unpredictable and potentially dangerous pattern than ever before.


He lists as mankind's biggest threats: nuclear terrorism, deadly engineered viruses, rogue machines and genetic engineering that could alter human character. All of those could result from innocent error or the action of a single malevolent individual.


By 2020, an instance of bioterror or bioerror will have killed a million people, Rees contends.


"There is a growing gap between doors that are open and doors that should be open," Rees, a professor at Britain's Cambridge University, said in a recent interview.


The cosmologist concedes that natural disasters have always loomed -- so-called supervolanoes could explode at any time and asteroids could slam into the planet, causing massive climate changes -- but says the most frightening risks are probably man-made.


"A hundred years ago, the nuclear threat wasn't even predicted ... but that threat still hasn't gone away," he said.


The arms race, after all, was fueled by science, and the field has a responsibility to inform a wide public of the risks in deciding how to apply scientific breakthroughs, he added.


BIOTECHNOLOGY COULD CHANGE HUMAN NATURE


"For the first time ever, human nature itself isn't fixed. Biotech drugs and genetic engineering are empowering individuals more than ever before," Rees said.


With rapidly advancing DNA technology, "even a single person could cause a disaster," Rees warned, noting that the United States, after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and anthrax scare, is well aware of this threat.


Thousands of people have the ability to engineer viruses and bacteria to cause deadly plagues. Even if one such "weirdo" didn't kill many people, that type of biological terrorism would profoundly change daily life, the scientist warned.


Nanotechnology -- the subject of a recent Michael Crichton thriller about the havoc caused by runaway microscopic machines -- are also a potent threat, he said.


If the field advances far enough, rogue self-replicating nanotechnology machines -- feeding on organic material and spreading like pollen -- could devastate a continent within a few days, Rees said.


The dangers of global warming (news - web sites) are also addressed in the book, subtitled "A scientist's warning: How terror, error, and environmental disaster threaten humankind's future in this century -- on Earth and beyond."


Rees does not discount the possibility of disaster caused by scientific experiments involving particle accelerators. "Perhaps a back hole could form, and then suck in everything around it," he cautions.

So what's to be done?

The British scientist calls for better regulation and inspection of sensitive data and experiments.

"We need to keep track of those who have potentially lethal knowledge," Rees said.

He also suggested better efforts to "reduce the number of people who feel excluded or otherwise motivated to cause harm
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Sethomas Sethomas is offline
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Old Jun 10th, 2003, 05:39 PM       
We're decades away from probing the level at which gravity would be any issue in a particle accelerator, and many believe that we'll never have enough energy resources to conduct such experiments. Still, if critical density is reached and the Earth implodes into a black hole, I'll laugh my ass off.
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El Blanco El Blanco is offline
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Old Jun 10th, 2003, 07:22 PM       
Does this guy have any clue the energy required to cause a big bang type event? We ain't doing it anytime soon.

While I understand that asking "should we" is just as important as "can we" but this guy is being a little bit overdramatic.
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