
Los
Angeles Times A Brief History of How the Once-Maligned Nerd
Became Cool (3/30/98) By Lee Dye Scientists and technologists-often
deplored, sometimes feared, frequently on the fringes of society-have become hip.
They grace the covers of news magazines, their frequently arcane research
is the stuff of bestsellers, and one of the members of their clan has become the
richest man in America. Even the motion picture industry has caught on. Historically,
movies have tended to portray scientists as a tad mad. But such films as "Contact"
show that scientists can be, well, almost like normal people. Of course, that
film was based on a novel written by a scientist, the late Carl Sagan. This
evolution in the perception of scientists has come about largely because science
and technology play an increasingly important role in all our lives. Instant
global communications and television coverage have shrunk the world. A kid with
a desktop computer can create new images and new tools-maybe even break into computer
systems that keep track of everything from our bank accounts to national security
projects. There seems to be an electronic gadget to meet every need. We all
have what we need now to do some science ourselves, ranging from computers to
digital imaging to direct access via e-mail to scientists and their institutions.
And that has led to the emergence of something new in our society. Borrowing
a phrase coined by science historian C.P. Snow, literary agent and science author
John Brockman calls it the "third culture. "In the past, culture has been
defined as art and music. When we have those, we have culture. When we don't,
we don't. But Brockman argues that technology has brought science into our
lives in such a dramatic way that a third culture has emerged. In 1981, Brockman
founded the Reality Club, an assortment of movers and shakers from the world of
science who traditionally meet in Chinese restaurants and artists' lofts around
New York City to ponder the great imponderables of the day. In the most common
expression of the third culture, a year ago Brockman started a Web site (http://www.edge.org)
to give scientists a forum in which to share their thoughts and their questions
with the world at large. He says the site addresses the motto of the Reality
Club: "To arrive at the edge of the world's knowledge, seek out the most complex
and sophisticated minds, put them in a room together and have them ask each other
the questions they are asking themselves. "Much of the discussion on the site
centers on the emergence of this new, global culture. Some of the material is
written specifically for the site, but some of it, including an essay by Kevin
Kelly, executive editor of Wired magazine, first appeared elsewhere. "This
new third culture is an offspring of science," writes Kelly in a piece originally
published in the Feb. 13 issue of Science. "It's a pop culture based in technology,
for technology. Call it nerd culture. "The computer revolution brought science
into our lives as never before, and for the Nintendo generation, technology became
their culture. And somewhere along the way, Kelly argues, a "funny thing happened:
Nerds became cool. "But nerds are not interested in science per se, Kelly
argues. The third culture is interested in results, particularly innovation.
"Its thrust is not pursuing truth, but pursuing novelty," Kelly writes. " 'New,'
'improved,' 'different' are key attributes for this technological culture.
"Yet oddly enough, some of the scientific arenas that are most in vogue these
days have little to do with novelty or even a tangible payback to society. No
one really needs to know the nature of a black hole, for instance, but astronomy
is one of the hottest buttons in science. * Nerds may be
hip, but they are the toolmakers. They are beholden to science because science
fuels their revolution. But it is the tools that fascinate them the most, not
the science. Technology may be the pathway to the third culture, but some
scientists are hip these days despite the fact that they may never have written
software or created a new gadget. They are hip because they are addressing questions
that spring from the roots of intellectual curiosity. Stephen Hawking, whose
writings about astrophysics triggered much of the current interest in science,
is an intellectual innovator, not a creator of computer games and novelties.
Yet Hawking could fill an auditorium in seconds with people eager to learn what
he has to say about the dynamics of the cosmos. Ironically, his crippling
disease has left him capable of speaking only through a computer-driven technological
innovation. Does that make him a product or a guru of the third culture? Scientists
have frequently been on a roller coaster when it comes to public perception. Their
image plummeted with fears growing out of the nuclear age and rose with humans
landing on the moon. But it may remain at a high level for many years to come.
It is rooted in a broad segment of society that is, in varying degrees, directly
engaged in science. Despite the powerful new astronomical observatories springing
up around the world, for example, most comets are still discovered by amateurs
with backyard telescopes. And the meteoric rise of Microsoft was driven by
Bill Gates, who dropped out of Harvard and created the most powerful software
company in the world. Yet despite all that, my hunch is that more kids could
name a dozen movie stars or sports heroes than a couple of scientists. That
is partly because many still feel intimidated by science, and scientific success
frequently goes unnoticed." Since 1937, the United States has anointed a national
poet laureate but never a science laureate," Kelly points out. Maybe the time
is ripe to change that, now that scientists are hip. If that ever happens, we
may not need to worry about those science scores anymore. Kids will see just
how cool it can be to be a nerd. [PHOTOS: Mamas, your babies could do worse
than grow up to be Carl Sagan; Stephen Hawking ; Bill Gates.] Copyright (c)
1998 Times Mirror Company |