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Sept.
16, 2002 |
Center for Ethics and Complex Systems Studies
Impact of Technological Change
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Thomas Griffin
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Kim
Fortun
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The advent of technology and its use to mine great
databases of biological information is both a boon and a bane
for ethicists, scientists, and policymakers. Rensselaer's Center
for Ethics and Complex Systems has been created to conduct social,
ethnographic, and historical research into the way technological
change drives scientific and societal change and to contribute
to the establishment of "best practices" for biotechnology.
"Ten years ago, scientists didn't have to
deal with such massive data flows as we see now," said center
director Kim Fortun. "While the speed and complexity of this
research has spawned many hopes, it has also given rise to many
unanswered ethical questions. Traditional bioethics is so rigid
there is no nuance. We want to get at the work-a-day ethics to
write the history of changing ethical sensibilities of scientific
practice."
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The center's mission is to understand and
address the ethical implications of new technologies, including
those brought about by emerging biotech research areas such
as pharmacogenomics and toxicogenomics, which make use of
tiny "labs on a chip" called microarrays.
Kim Fortun
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The center's mission, according to Fortun, is
to understand and address the ethical implications of new technologies,
including those brought about by emerging biotech research areas
such as pharmacogenomics and toxicogenomics, which make use of
tiny "labs on a chip" called microarrays.
Pharmacogenomics is the attempt to identify an
individual's variation in drug response to create "designer"
drugs for individuals. Toxicogenomics combines information from
microarray results, proteomics, and other genetic studies to model
biological and environmental stressors.
While both fields of study have been recognized
as having wide-ranging social impacts, neither research area has
been studied in depth by social scientists, Fortun says.
The Center for Ethics and Complex Systems is housed
within the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and its core
members include science and technology professors Mike Fortun,
a historian and bioethicist; Edward Woodhouse, a political scientist;
and Nancy Campbell, a policy historian.
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