Now on ScienceBlogs: HeartlandGate: Anti-Science Institute's Insider Reveals Secrets

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Profile

The vanguard of science has always been populated with young visionaries, those individuals who are motivated by impossibility and undaunted by failure, who operate and lead in a world in which cross-pollination and the synthesis of ideas are the norm. Seed’s Revolutionary Minds series features profiles of theses young innovators that are changing our world, moving us forward by asking the unasked questions. They revolutionize how science exists and operates, ensuring a better, more fulfilling, scientific future for us all.


Greg J. Smith is a Toronto-based designer with an active interest in the intersection of space and media. He authors Serial Consign, a blog dedicated to digital culture and information design and is a regular contributor to Rhizome. Greg co-edits the art and technology journal Vague Terrain and is currently working on several writing and design projects focused on the representation of urban space.


Search

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

« Visualization at the Crossroads | Main | Form Follows... Visual Literacy? »

Thoughts on Cross-Disciplinary Research

Category: Boundaries of science
Posted on: September 14, 2009 12:10 PM, by Greg J. Smith

wilbanks150.jpgBelow, John Wilbanks answers the second of our three questions.



Cross-disciplinary work is where the big stuff happens. Watson and Crick were in their own way cross-disciplinary (bringing together the phage and the chemical work of each). Climate change is one very obvious place where the work must be cross-disciplinary. You have a dizzying sea of fields from hydrology and earth sciences, to geospatial and weather, to economics and political science that need to be integrated to make good decisions, and understand the risk of bad ones. Batteries also strike me as a place ripe for two geniuses from different fields to make a real breakthrough--energy storage needs a quantum leap forward.

But in a lot of places I feel it will be the emergence of people who don't think of themselves as cross-disciplinary in the traditional sense. DIY biologists don't think about cross-disciplinarity, they just want to hack--and their work skates across at least five disciplines of traditional biology and engineering!


Share on Facebook
Share on StumbleUpon
Share on Facebook

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/119940

Comments

1

No, DIY biology doesn't think about cross-disciplinary stuff, or impact factor, or tenure, or grant funding. That frees it to do what it wants how it wants with the resources at hand, and that is why it is awesome.

Posted by: Toaster | September 14, 2009 2:08 PM

2

Hi Toaster,

What are some examples of DIY biologists? I can see how the Critical Art Ensemble (who I mentioned a few posts back) represent DIY biotech but what about biology? I'd love some links or examples to investigate.

Posted by: Greg J. Smith Author Profile Page | September 14, 2009 8:37 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.