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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.
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October 31, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, Margaret Turnbull answers our final question. Even in my small area of astrobiology, the design of a single mission to find habitable planets orbiting other stars requires substantial input from the studies of astrophysics, space communications, space flight technology,...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 2:10 AM • 1 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 29, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, Edward Einhorn answers our final question. Writing theater about science, in general, has become somewhat more popular, thanks partly (but by no means wholly) on the fact that technology has slowly become a more integral part of theater. This...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 10:05 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Boundaries of science
image: a proposed example of an immune-inspired network system, source: SYMBRION & REPLICATORIn identifying computer science as a nexus of interdisciplinary collaboration, Fernando Esponda cites Artificial Immune Systems (AIS) as research exemplifying this sentiment. Esponda describes AIS as an attempt...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 12:00 AM • 1 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 27, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, Skylar Tibbits answers our final question. Cross-disciplinary approaches have proved useful to gain insight into unknown territories, quickly change scale and application, push past a field's current boundaries and inspire new directions and connections. Varying skills and necessities often...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 6:35 PM • 1 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 26, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, Fernando Esponda answers our final question. Computer science is a discipline that is intrinsically interdisciplinary. Primarily because the computer itself—the externalization of our logic apparatus—is such an enticing and versatile tool. Therefore, it is not hard to find examples...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 12:26 PM • 1 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 23, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
image: history flow edit log of the Wikipedia article on evolutionNick Matzke is ambitious when he exercises his imagination. In answering our final question, Matzke sketches out a methodology for tracking how public policies or scientific hypotheses were "copied, repeated,...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 11:23 PM • 2 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, John Wilbanks answers our final question. Cross-disciplinarity seems to work best when there's a problem that has a few facets that are apparently unconnected, but the disconnect comes from the artificial way we divide up the knowledge. Because in...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 12:11 AM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 20, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
I erroneously titled the post that contained Michelle Borkin's final answer "Collaboration and Hemodynamics" and this definitely reflected an oversight on my part. In addition to discussing hemodynamics Michelle also touched on the Astronomical Medicine project, a venture that definitely...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 7:00 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 19, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Below, Nick Matzke answers our final question. Continuing the previous theme - I recently got interested in the origin of a particular apocryphal quote attributed to a famous scientist. The quote exists in hundreds of books and tens of thousands...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 10:38 AM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
October 17, 2009
Category: Boundaries of science
Well, since Josh Ruxin's thoughts on private sector strategies in medical management were so popular it is clear that the RevMinds community is hungry for additional perspective on healthcare as a nexus of multidisciplinary action. As I mentioned in my...
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Posted by Greg J. Smith at 6:14 PM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks