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Nanoethics: The Watchdog Of A New Technology?

Date:
July 3, 2007
Source:
Springer
Summary:
The field of nanotechnology has the potential to be used in a wide range of industries, but the question is whether it is a good investment. In an article just published in the debut issue of the journal NanoEthics entitled, "Ethics and Technology 'in the Making': An essay on the Challenge of Nanoethics," an expert discusses how nanoethicists can be among the actors who shape the meaning and materiality of an emerging technology.
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The field of nanotechnology is broad and has the potential to be used in a wide range of industries and fields, but the question is whether it is a good investment.  Will it solve fundamental social problems that assure a better future?  In an article just published in the debut issue of the journal NanoEthics entitled, “Ethics and Technology ‘in the Making’: An essay on the Challenge of Nanoethics,” an expert discusses how nanoethicists can be among the actors who shape the meaning and materiality of an emerging technology.

NanoEthics: Ethics for Technologies that Converge at the Nanoscale provides a multidisciplinary forum for exploration of ethical issues related to nanotechnology.  It contains a philosophically and scientifically rigorous examination of both the ethical and societal considerations as well as the public and policy concerns inherent in nanotechnology research and development.  The journal is of interest to researchers, scholars and students as well as scientific and technological policymakers and decision-makers in corporations involved in nanotechnology.

Editor-in-Chief John Weckert of the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, part of Charles Sturt University, ANU and the University of Melbourne, said, “Not only are the impacts or likely impacts of nanotechnologies the subject matter of this journal, but so are the uncertainties about nanoethics.  Nanotechnologies encourage examination, or reexamination, of some basic issues in the ethics and philosophy of technology and science.  This journal will help stimulate these discussions.”

NanoEthics will be published three times a year online and in print.  The journal is available on Springer’s online platform http://www.springerlink.com and includes Online First™, Cross Reference Linking, and Alert services.  In addition, all NanoEthics authors, via the Springer Open Choice program, have the option of publishing their articles using the open access publishing model.

Springer is the second-largest publisher of journals in the science, technology, and medicine (STM) sector and the largest publisher of STM books.  Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media, one of the world’s leading suppliers of scientific and specialist literature.  The group publishes over 1,700 journals and more than 5,500 new books a year, as well as the largest STM eBook Collection worldwide.  Springer has operations in over 20 countries in Europe, the USA, and Asia, and some 5,000 employees.

The first issue of the journal can be viewed free of charge at http://www.springerlink.com/content/1871-4765


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Cite This Page:

Springer. "Nanoethics: The Watchdog Of A New Technology?." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 3 July 2007. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070628071616.htm>.
Springer. (2007, July 3). Nanoethics: The Watchdog Of A New Technology?. ScienceDaily. Retrieved May 2, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070628071616.htm
Springer. "Nanoethics: The Watchdog Of A New Technology?." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070628071616.htm (accessed May 2, 2024).

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