| You
are in an amazing position. You are the most powerful president in a
generation. Be bold! Science and technology are the most potent tools
mankind has for improving our circumstances. Let's use this amazing
moment in history to create a new period of happiness and prosperity.
Please don't let your marvelous position in history go to waste.
Jaron
Lanier
Dear Mr.
President,
Whether
or not you choose to follow up with me specifically, I want to thank
you for reaching out to a scientist who doesn't benefit from prior personal
connections to someone associated with your administration. Your sphere
of advisors has seemed unusually distant from the scientific and technical
communities.
I can
understand, in a way, why you have been reticent in the past. Many scientists
work in the academic environment, which tends to be liberal minded,
and perhaps you've worried that there would be an ideological coloration
in the advice you would receive. It would seem that the scientific mainstream
is often at odds with your administration on issues such as stem cell
research, global warming, and so on.
But the
best way around this is not to retreat from the scientific community
as a whole, but to embrace it, and demand that it find a way to transcend
ideological colorations in its interactions with you. After all, much
of the discipline of science is devoted to reducing personal bias. We
spend a lot of our time repeating work that's already been done before
because we're so cautious about our all-too-human vulnerabilities that
could lead to self-deception. In a way we are the most skeptically conservative
community around, and you would probably find more common ground with
us than you expect if you gave us more of a try.
I suppose
a science advisor has to be part speech writer and part budget warrior.
With that
in mind, I would like to give you a sense of what my advice would be
like on a variety of difficult issues.
You are
in an amazing position. You are the most powerful president in a generation.
Be bold! Science and technology are the most potent tools mankind has
for improving our circumstances. Let's use this amazing moment in history
to create a new period of happiness and prosperity. Please don't let
your marvelous position in history go to waste.
In this
note I will address the four toughest issues, which present the greatest
opportunities and the most difficult political dilemmas. These are:
1) New
medicine
2) New energy and transportation solutions.
3) Global warming response.
4) War on terror.
America's
success on every level has depended in the past on government lead research
initiatives.
There
are three models from the twentieth century for giant government research
and development projects: The Manhattan Project, the Apollo Program,
and the era of massive public works, including the TVA, much of the
WPA, and the Interstates.
We have
to be bold and imagine a new type of national initiative that combines
the best of all three models. The Manhattan project showed what can
be done by gathering the very best minds in one place. The Apollo Program
showed that it's possible to do big science in a way that engages all
the world in a positive way. The massive public works projects I listed,
while they might be abhorrent to your economic advisors, should be appreciated
because they showed that government can create a giant infrastructure
without damage to democracy or capitalism.
I do not
propose that big centralized science initiatives are the best method
of tackling all our hardest problems, only the ones I listed above.
Private
industry can sometimes address a big problem, even one that is serious
enough to threaten our survival. In such cases, government should still
play role of oversight and be ready to step in should industry fail
for some reason. Some examples in this category:
1) Impending
loss of efficacy of antibiotics
2) Need for new desalinization technologies and other fixes for looming
shortages of fresh water
3) AIDS crisis. In this case, private industry has the research and
manufacturing infrastructure in place already, but is not structured
to do as much as it should to help patients in most of the world.
An enhanced government role is crucial, because this problem as well
as other related ones in the Third World will have a huge impact on
our security in the long term.
About stem cells, cloning, and such things:
Here we
have the potential to extend and improve human life, and it's just the
sort of research that is better undertaken under governmental lead.
It's expensive, high risk, and fraught with ethical concerns. Furthermore,
if the vast new intellectual property riches are either Balkanized or
monopolized, humanity will suffer, and America's role in the world order
will be seriously challenged.
You face
a tough situation here, though, in that one of your core constituencies,
the faith-based voters, is understandably queasy about the whole direction.
So you've sought compromises on such things as embryonic stem cell research,
but the available compromises don't quite give the scientific community
enough room to make progress. I understand how difficult these decisions
are.
There
are two likely negative outcomes from your policies as they stand. In
the short term, legitimate research on new fundamental medicine will
often be overshadowed by weird proprietary outfits, such as the supposed
cloning achieved by a UFO cult or stray doctors here and there. These
events poison public discourse.
In the
long term, foreign countries will enjoy an economic advantage because
the US will not be a center of expertise in medicine. In twenty years
we could see a phenomenon in which masses of Americans who can afford
the trip head to Europe or Asia for medical care, leaving their dollars
abroad, so that there's increasingly less wealth to go around for those
Americans who had to stay home.
I don't
need to tell you how significant this would be to the long term economic
health of our nation.
I would
advise you to use your bully pulpit to be tough with both your religious
constituents AND the scientific research establishments.
To the
scientists, I would say something like this: "You have yourselves to
blame in part for the public's reticence to fund the new age of medicine.
You seem to love making claims about life's fundamental questions. I'm
sick of reading that some robot at MIT has gained emotions, that some
new gene explains as much as you seem to claim about a person's character,
or any opinion of yours at all about consciousness or God. I don't believe
you have expertise on these matters and you embarrass yourselves."
Yes, I want you to be that tough on us, because we deserve it, and because
it is what your religious constituents need to hear in the public sphere.
Of course
you can have a speech writer smooth these thoughts out so they sound
nicer. I'm used to combative debates so you have to tone down any advice
I give you in matters of rhetoric. I'm sure you have people who can
handle that job.
To your
religious constituents, I would say this: "Your concerns are legitimate
and sane, but it's possible you've been mislead a bit by those who enjoy
exaggerating the true nature of the new frontiers in medicine. You must
remember that scientists have to sell themselves in order to be funded,
just like everyone else, so you need to learn to discount a little bit
of the science fiction-like atmosphere that surrounds reporting on recent
research.
For instance, they talk about 'clones', but that's a science fiction
word. Dolly the sheep was really no more than a delayed twin, and in
fact less similar to Dolly than a regular twin would have been. That's
not to say that I support the creation of human delayed twinsI
don't. But it's important not to allow the scientific community to mystify
what it can do.
It is
essential that we hold life precious. Unfortunately, Americans don't
always agree on specific questions like abortion, but I know that almost
all Americans do hold life sacred and precious. I want to suggest to
you that defining the chemical moment of conception as the start of
life is not going to work, because it is a definition based on scientific
concepts which are themselves in the process of being transformed. We
can't reduce human life to a mechanical interaction of molecules, or
whatever objects scientists are talking about in a given era. I believe
that there is a difference between a collection of cells and a personcall
it a soul if you like. If you believe there's a soul in a Petrie dish,
you reduce what you mean by a soul.
I want
my family and friends to be relieved from disease when it is possible
and I want the same for your family and friends. Please join me in a
loving quest to achieve this possibility."
I think
this approach can work.
Once you
win the hearts of both sides, and I think you can, an ethics policy
should be based on open information and consent. A person should know
and approve of what happens to their tissue. No viable embryo should
be created outside of the rule of law. And so on.
But please,
let us proceed to improve our lives using the means available to us.
I'll next address Energy, Transportation, and Climate:
We have
to address the possibility of climate cataclysm. If we take the position
that Kyoto is flawed, and I think there's a strong case that it is,
we must articulate an alternative soon, so that the world doesn't think
we're crazy.
The revolution
in transportation and energy must come about anyway, whether the climate
scare is legitimate or not.
I have
a bit of a confession to make here. My colleagues and I might have contributed
to your falsely optimistic sense about the near term potential of the
oil economy. In the last twenty years, ever more powerful computers
have created the illusion the oil supply is increasing. I worked on
some of the first virtual oil field exploration tools, and such tools
have made oil fields far more productive than we ever imagined. Furthermore,
computer-aided design has helped produce a new generation of oil extraction
machinery that can get at the oil we discover through our simulations.
That's all fine, and I'm proud of how much computer science has been
able to contribute to the oil exploration business, but there's also
a hidden danger. Without computers, not only would oil have been running
out by now, but it would have run out gradually, with prices going up
as a warning sign. I'm afraid that computers are creating the illusion
of an ever increasing supply, and will therefore reduce the period of
warning before the supply runs out, which it will.
So, I
suppose I hope to make you aware of how my colleagues and I have inadvertently
fooled you on this matter. But this issue can be framed positively even
better than it can be framed negatively. Why don't we invent new, better
fuels and engines and then sell them to the world? What's wrong with
that picture? It seems like such a win-win solution.
We should
create a new energy/transportation infrastructure, presumably based
on a cleaner and more efficient chemistry than the current one. I agree
with the emerging consensus that it would probably consist of decentralized
hydrogen production, possibly using biotechnology to make the hydrogen.
I also see cars that can drive themselves, almost never getting into
accidents, and merging flawlessly and automatically into trains to create
ad-hoc mass-transit solutions. Car accidents cause more deaths than
wars, so the introduction of this technology would create a new boom
in wealth and happiness even aside from the curing of problems related
to dependence on oil.
If the
world saw us building the next energy cycle, our policies related to
the current energy cycle would be less contentious.
We might
have already contorted the climate enough that switching fuels will
not be enough. We might need to resort to a massive technological fix.
I dearly hope this will not come to pass, but I believe we should set
up an institute that explores such high risk measures as re-carving
the ocean floors or intercepting the sun's energy in space on its way
to the Earth. Once again, I would grieve if it came to pass that we
had to attempt measures such as these in the future, but I must regretfully
recommend that we begin to prepare ourselves just in case.
The recent
surprise announcement by the Japanese that they had created the world's
fastest computer, in order to model the weather, should be treated as
a friendly Sputnik-like event. I'm on the science board for what had
been the world's fastest civilian computer, at the Pittsburgh Supercomputer
Center, and I have to tell you my heart sank when I read the announcement,
even though I'm also happy that the new Japanese machine is being put
to a good use. I hope you felt as embarrassed as I did, and I wish you
would share that emotion with the public.
About the war on terror.
War is
Hell. I lived right by the World Trade Center, and I dearly wish I had
not been home that day. It is clear that in our connected world, in
which many technologies become cheaper and more widely available because
of Moore's Law-like processes, and in which communication is easy and
essentially free, the old equations about privacy and liberty have to
be re thought. I hate this fact with the whole of my being, but I acknowledge
it's a fact.
I don't
think your administration has been handling this matter very well. For
instance, your attorney general comes off badly in public. He seems
to be enjoying this turn of events, as if it vindicates his beliefs.
If you want Americans or other people in the world to make the mental
transition and emotional commitment into a new order, your administration
ought to be able to show that it shares in the pain.
You might
be thinking to yourself, "This matter is none of my science advisor's
business." But privacy these days is about digital policy, and that
overlaps both socially and institutionally with the scientific and engineering
communities.
I believe
you have to have these communities on board in order for your policies
to be successful and for the country to be more secure.
I have
two specific suggestions.
First,
if you want the public to accept less privacy, make it symmetric. Instead
of merely building a new domestic spying capability that itself would
be vulnerable to corruption, as secret centers of power always are,
make key institutions more open and transparent.
This serves
multiple purposes. Let's not forget that since the war on terror began,
corrupt accounting cost the country more, in monetary terms, than the
terrorist attacks. The direct costs were tremendous, but the indirect
costs due to the gutting of investor confidence were immeasurable.
We have
the greatest information infrastructure in all history, and yet investors
weren't tipped off about a wave of massive fraudulent schemes until
it was too late. This cannot stand. The remedy is to make big companies
and yes, big government agencies, as transparent to the public as the
public must become to the new security apparatus.
This might
sound counterintuitive at first. Would this not give terrorists more
information and therefore advantage as they planned attacks?
I think
there are strong arguments that symmetry increases security. No matter
how big the spy agencies might be, they can't employ enough trusted
eyeballs to look at all the data. And no, as your advisor I can assure
you that you cannot count on artificial intelligence programs to make
up the gap. The only solution is to have the whole public looking. It
was widely distributed public information that lead to the capture of
the Unabomber, the DC snipers, and so on.
The strength
of Islamist terrorist cells is not so much that they are well trained
as that they benefit from a surrounding society that doesn't call in
tips. This leads to the second reason to support symmetry. Transparency
can be used to make the world friendlier to the US.
Here I
would like to add a specific recommendation. The Arabic-speaking world
is encountering the power of modern propaganda for the first time via
satellite TV. Our response has been to craft infomercials, but why not
try to find the next generation of leaders when they are young. They
are undoubtedly oriented to new media just like their Western counterparts.
Why not make language translators available on the web so that kids
in Arabic speaking countries can browse English language websites and
learn for themselves about us? Why not encourage personal links using
the web? Why not make science and technology education materials available
in this way?
None of these proposals would be easy to implement. Computer access
is restricted in repressive countries, for instance. Nonetheless, there
is considerable room to maneuver and it doesn't cost much.
In a related
vein, we could do more to help empower and win the hearts of young people
in the exploding populations of the third world by cleverly using inexpensive
technology. We could use the latest advances in speech recognition and
synthesis to empower illiterate people with access to basic information,
for instance. Even undernourished populations often gain access to consumer
electronics these days. This strange situation could be turned to advantage.
Why not design a hard-to-detect, human powered, wireless communicator
designed for illiterate people and give away millions of them in the
poorest parts of the world? Why not bring these people into the web
of modernity, in which they might find their way to a better life and
coincidentally might just send in tips?
All of
these ideas relate to security, because as soon as terrorists realize
there's even a slight increase in the chance that someone in their home
environment might rat on them, they rapidly lose maneuvering room. A
little openness could go a long way.
I believe
that if such devices were in place, we'd have given out the unclaimed
cash award for information leading to the capture of Bin Laden by now.
Respectfully,
Jaron
Lanier
Computer Scientist And Musician
Pioneer of Virtual Reality
Founder and former CEO of VPL
Currently the lead scientist for the National Tele-Immersion Initiative.
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