1.2 How Science and Technology Are for Society

  • Section 1.1 explained that the key to future
    progress for mankind lies in the realization of
    “science and technology for society, and in
    society.” In Section 1.2, the current state of science
    and technology, and the issues confronting it, are
    examined from the viewpoint of “science and
    technology for society.”
    1.2.1 Contributing to Society through
    Knowledge Creation and Utilization
    Scientific and technological activities refers to
    the elucidation of unknown phenomena, and to the
    creation of new knowledge through the discovery of
    new natural laws and principles, and the new
    knowledge obtained is then utilized in the real
    society. The essence of how science and technology
    contributes to society is the creation of new
    knowledge, and then utilization of that knowledge
    to boost the prosperity of human lives, and to solve
    the various issues facing society.
    With the shift to a knowledge-based society well
    underway in the opening years of the 21st century,
    the creation of new knowledge is an increasingly
    important aspect of scientific and technological
    activities, and the role of science in this knowledge
    creation is important for the realization of “science
    and technology for society.”
    The relationship between science and technology
    and society, can be described by the example of
    rain falling on a mountain. Rain that has fallen on a
    mountain does not immediately wash away
    downhill. First, it is captured and stored by forests,
    giving life to trees and other vegetation and creating
    a verdant landscape. This can be compared to the
    accumulation of scientific knowledge and the
    continuing search for truth, obtained through basic
    research, and perhaps demonstrates that science has
    intrinsic value in itself. Meanwhile, the rainwater
    stored in the forest bubbles out from springs and
    flows downhill in a steadily widening stream. A
    single stream flow can separate into a large number
    of sub-flows, and sometimes the flow can go
    underground into a subterranean network. This
    situation can be compared to the diversity of
    research and development that can arise based on
    scientific knowledge, leading to the planting of
    various new technological seeds. Eventually, the
    river reaches farming communities and urban cities,
    where it is utilized for drinking water and other
    household purposes, for agricultural or industrial
    uses, and for various other needs, universally
    benefiting all aspects of society. This is equivalent
    to research and development resulting in practical
    technologies that boost the prosperity of the
    people’s society and lives, and to the utilization of
    science and technology in response to various
    issues facing society. If the forest fails to capture a
    sufficient amount of the falling rain, society will
    quickly be faced with drought and people will not
    be able to live. In the same way, realization of
    societal progress through science and technology
    requires a sufficient accumulation of scientific
    knowledge. In other words, science can be
    considered to be the foundation strength of society.
    However, this foundation strength is not something
    that can be acquired in a single day or night, but
    instead requires a steady, continuous build-up
    (Figure 1-2-1).
    Figure 1-2-1 Relationship between science and technology and society
    This section looks at science as the foundation
    for realizing “science and technology for society,”
    with a focus on the natural sciences.
    1.2.1.1 Science’s Contribution to
    Human Civilization
    (Societal Significance of Science)
    Where technology has developed in close
    relationship to the convenience and prosperity of
    human life since before the advent of recorded
    history, science originated from natural philosophy
    and was supported by people’s intellectual curiosity.
    The main objective of science has been elucidation
    of how nature is put together and operates, and it
    has developed as a separate entity from technology.
    Of course, while technological progress was backed
    up by various scientific advances, this does not
    mean that scientific research was conducted for the
    purpose of developing new technologies, rather,
    scientific knowledge was utilized only because it
    was available. In fact, it was more common for new
    technologies to be developed in order to pursue
    scientific research.
    After the Industrial Revolution, the separate
    paths taken by science and technology began to
    move closer together. Significantly, the concept of
    linking scientific results to technology for
    utilization in society became prevalent after around
    1850, which is when a chemical industry began to
    develop based on utilization of knowledge about
    chemistry, and electrical technologies arose based
    on knowledge about electromagnetism.
    Nevertheless, science has moved away from
    being the business of the intellectual world, with
    scientific results now pioneering the frontiers of
    human activities in terms of both space and time,
    and expanding the potential of human activities.
    Science also has become a major influence on
    people’s sense of values, changing the nature of
    society and becoming the engine driving society’s
    progress from the viewpoint of civilization.
    (Scientific Progress Has Changed
    the Nature of Society, and Its Sense
    of Values)
    While there are probably no end of examples of
    scientific progress having a major effect on
    people’s sense of values, and changing the nature of
    society itself, the following is an introduction to just
    a few of the more famous examples.
    The centennial anniversary to one of the most
    amazing years in history (the “Miracle Year” of
    1905) is fast approaching, when Albert Einstein,
    one of the premier scientists of the 20th century,
    issued in rapid succession a theory of the photon, a
    theory of Brownian motion, and the Special Theory
    of Relativity, all of which served to overthrow the
    then-prevailing views of physics. Einstein’s Theory
    of Relativity became the foundations for all later
    physics, contributing greatly to progress in various
    fields of science. At the same time, it altered
    people’s concepts of space and time, and had a huge
    effect on philosophy and thought.
    In the field of astronomy, Nicolaus Copernicus
    developed a theory, later bolstered and refined by
    Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei, that had a
    great effect on the development and reform of
    society, overthrowing Europe’s medieval sense of
    values and driving it into the modern age. In recent
    years, however, examples of such society-changing
    advances have become increasingly common. For
    example, Edwin Hubble’s discovery in 1929 that
    the universe was expanding led directly to the Big
    Bang theory of the origin of the universe (1946) by
    George Gamow and others. In 1965, Arno Penzias
    and Robert Wilson detected cosmic background
    radiation pervading the universe, providing
    powerful evidence for the Big Bang theory. These
    discoveries gave people a new “sense of the
    universe.” Moreover, advances in space
    development have greatly expanded the space
    available for possible human activities, and opened
    up new frontiers for humanity where people can
    dream. At the same time, images of Earth taken
    from space have given people all over the world a
    new “view of the Earth,” vividly revealing its
    beauty and irreplaceability. Furthermore, the
    revelation in 1974 by Sherwood Rowland and
    Mario Molina that chlorofluorocarbon gases were
    causing depletion of the ozone layer, followed in
    1985 by the discovery of an ozone hole, had a huge
    effect on efforts to protect the global environment.
    Alfred Wegener’s theory of continental drift,
    announced in 1915, is widely accepted around the
    world today as the plate tectonics theory. At the
    time of its announcement, however, the mechanism
    for continental drift was unknown, and the theory
    attracted few supporters. In the 1950s and later,
    however, advances in sea floor monitoring
    advanced the field of geophysics, and in the 1960s
    Frederick Vine and Drummond Mathews found
    quantitative evidence of continental drift due to a
    spreading sea floor. This discovery completely
    altered people’s “sense of the Earth.”
    In the life sciences, meanwhile, as seen by such
    advances as the Theory of Evolution proposed by
    Charles Robert Darwin in the 19th century, which
    greatly changed people’s “sense of nature,” “sense
    of humanity,” and “sense of society,” there are
    many examples of discoveries going far beyond the
    world of science to affect the way people think in
    many sectors of society. The discovery in 1953 of
    the double helix structure of the DNA molecule by
    James Watson and Francis Crick gave birth to an
    entirely new field of molecular biology. The result
    has been progressive elucidation of the structure of
    living things at the molecular level and rapid
    advances in the life sciences, including the
    establishment of gene recombinant technology by
    Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer in 1973, the birth
    of a cloned sheep, Dolly, in 1996, and completion
    in 2003 of the project to sequence the entire human
    genome, conducted by the International Human
    Genome Sequencing Consortium, a collaboration of
    six countries including Japan, and five other North
    American and European countries. These recent
    advances in the life sciences have greatly increased
    understanding of humans and other living things,
    extending the frontiers of human activity,
    particularly in the medical field, and greatly
    affecting people’s “sense of life” and “sense of
    ethics.” Furthermore, advances in brain research
    hint at the possibility of closing in on the human
    soul, and progress in that area will surely have a
    large effect on people’s sense of values.
    The IT revolution of recent years is the
    culmination of many developments in computer
    technology, including the concept of the computing
    machine proposed by Alan Turing, and the
    invention of the transistor by William Shockley,
    John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain, as well as the
    advent of the Internet and other advances in
    information and communications technology. The
    IT revolution, however, does not consist merely of
    the development of new products or improvement
    of people’s convenience, but is also greatly
    changing people’s modes of behavior and lifestyles,
    through the possibilities it has opened up for the
    people of the world to use cyberspace for
    instantaneous exchange of information and opinions.
    The effects of the IT revolution have changed the
    nature of society in many dimensions, from the
    education, medical and welfare, transport, finance,
    and manufacturing sectors to modes of work and
    play.
    Furthermore, advances in nanotechnology have
    made possible the elucidation and manipulation of
    phenomena at the atomic or molecular level, feats
    that were previously considered impossible, and are
    now expanding the range of possible human
    activities. Nanotechnology was launched by a
    lecture given in 1959 by Richard Feynman, titled
    “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” and its
    progress has been marked by advances in
    measurement technology, and supported by such
    scientific discoveries as the discovery of fullerenes
    in 1984 by Harold Kroto and others.
    Elsewhere, the television has become a major
    factor shaping our modern society, as the
    communications medium with the greatest influence.
    This device, as well, is the culmination of various
    scientific results over the years, beginning with the
    invention of wireless communication by Guglielmo
    Marconi in 1895, the invention of the Braun tube in
    1897, the invention of the Yagi-Uda antenna in
    1925, and Kenjiro Takayanagi’s successful
    transmission of an electronic image using a Braun
    tube in 1926.

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