MIT Making Computer Parts from DNA 243
Rei writes "Following in the footsteps of Lynn Conway's pioneering work on VLSI that allowed ordinary students to create their own processors, a group of MIT professors have almost completed doing the same thing
using DNA, known as synthetic biology. While not all of the components of a basic computer are working yet, there is hope that some day ordinary students may be able to design living computers, producing everything from novel drugs to seeds that sprout into treehouses."
Humans playing God? (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, it appears that they're actually trying to create synthetic living things, which is way beyond computer parts. If they can pull this off, it will be one hell of a hack. Humans playing God, creating life. Theology may well be shaken to its very foundations.
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
What if an asteroid strikes the planet shortly after this happens and wipes out the human race?
*Patiently waiting for my +3 Interesting mod for pointing out the bad things that can happen*
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
How so? What does it prove that we can "create" life? If anything, it's more proof that some religions are right. The great immitator at work again, man wanting to replace God.
Pan
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2, Funny)
I don't know.. man creates God, man creates nanotech, nanotech destroys man, aliens laugh at silly carbon-based lifeforms.
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem that I have with 'creating life' is that how do we know that what we do is going to be something that doesn't create a plauge?
I guess that the modivation of most people over there at MIT is that they want to patent something and then live off of it for the rest of their lives. They don't seem to me to actually be concerned about anything more than their next grant or getting tenure and being shown as being so clever.
So, if the profit motive is
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
Public universities issue patents all the time. They even have foundations [uvapf.org] set up for that very purpose.
More fundamental questions... (Score:3, Interesting)
Being able to re-create life from dead things does not mean making them alive again... it just means you create a new life from the remains (inert) of another life form. Let's not get into "Pet Cemetary" like arguments here =)
IMHO, abiogenesis is inevitably possible. But I also think that that raises an
Re:More fundamental questions... (Score:2)
I also happen to think that consciousness is very fundamentally linked with quantum physics and how nothing is deterministic. But that's just really far out there, and people are going to call me crazy...
I share that opinion, and so does Penrose. I have a braindump of my thoughts on it here [happy-digital.com], where I deviate from Penrose quite a bit. I'm sure he doesn't care. The first paragraph is the most lucid; the rest goes a little bit into left field.
strong proof for Science (Score:2)
A scientist, I still have to keep all possible hypothesis in my mind, include that of an unmeasured "life force", unlikely as that seems to be necessary, until shown otherwise.
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
We would also demonstrate that "intelligent creators can create things" which frankly isn't saying much.
Too late (Score:2)
There was a story on shashdot a few months ago (can't find it..) indicating that some researchers created a virus or a bacteria from non-living components.
I think this story is more about creating life for a purpose that we do not find natually. Other than that, it is already here.
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
Sacks of chemicals, people. Just interesting sacks.
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:5, Funny)
Well, you can have one, according to Isaac Asimov [tripod.com].
The Clone Song
By: Isaac Asimov
Tune: Home On The Range
Oh, give me a clone
Of my own flesh and bone
With its Y chromosome changed to X.
And after it's grown,
Then my own little clone
Will be of the opposite sex.
chorus:
Clone, clone of my own,
With its Y chromosome changed to X.
And when I'm alone
With my own little clone
We will both think of nothing but sex.
Read the full song by Isaac Asimov [tripod.com].
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2)
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2, Funny)
Is that incest or masturbation?
Yes.
Red Dwarf (Score:2)
By: Isaac Asimov
Tune: Home On The Range
Oh, give me a clone
Of my own flesh and bone
With its Y chromosome changed to X.
And after it's grown,
Then my own little clone
Will be of the opposite sex.
Hey, Rimmer actually did that in an episode of Red Dwarf [imdb.com]!
Started a whole civilisation of smeag-heads... didn't turn out right
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2, Funny)
2. Sign treaties
3. Obligatory intermediate step
4. Profit!!
Even I could see that one!
Re:Humans playing God? (Score:2, Funny)
If it isn't supposed to happen, He in his Infinite Wisdom would not allow it.
Don't worry about it so much.
Ha (Score:5, Funny)
[Slashdot user looks up from sketchpad] What's that? Seeds that sprout into treehouses? Yeah, I suppose that could be useful.
[Goes back to designing Angelina Jolie X7c]
Re:Ha (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, so nice and everything, but will it run Linux?
Re:Ha (Score:2)
Re:Ha (Score:2)
Yeah, so nice and everything, but will it run Linux?
Alright, all you AJ-X7c's into the hot tub. It's time for a Beowulf cluster!
Re:Ha (Score:2)
[Gets the 105 pounds of feedstock matter ready for the Molecular Assembler]
BOFH on DNA (Score:5, Funny)
"You may be right," I say, "but I'm sure that a quick subpoena would sort everything out."
"Subpoena?" he asks. "What for?"
"Just a sample of your DNA - to prove that you now contain some of my IP."
"It won't show anything!"
"Oh, don't worry, I'd subpoena your tissue again if the first test was inconclusive."
"And keep on doing it until you find something I suppose?"
"Oh no. No, we only get two cracks at it - unless you've got three testicles"
"WHAT!"
"Yes, Well you realise that if you've absorbed my IP, any children you have would have to be licensed, and of course the only way I can prove absorption would be through your reproductive organs."
BMI (Score:4, Funny)
On a side note: ew.
Re:BMI (Score:2)
Re:BMI (Score:2)
- Stereotypical
Doing DNA at home... (Score:5, Interesting)
science fair project for years (Score:2)
Not that the nerdy kid next door is going to stumble onto a Frankenstein
Re:Doing DNA at home... (Score:2)
Dig my black holes,
Which I infer
from the way the plasma blows
out magnetic poles
beaming neutrinos
I aint no sucka WIMP
or little neutrino
I got mah dark matter going on
cause I am so MACHO
food (Score:4, Funny)
Ick... (Score:2)
Curious. The sci-fi approach has always been machine interfacing with man but I don't think too much thought was given to specially engineered organic components that are all wetware but serve non-organic functions. (Well, maybe Giger...)
Re:Ick... (Score:2)
Re:Ick... (Score:2)
Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:5, Funny)
Without stating a position either way on the existence (or nonexistence) of God, what better way to glorify a Creator than by showing Him we've learned some of His tricks?
(Allow me one assumption here: the assumption that if God exists, He's not a copyright lawyer, and will be flattered by our success, rather than whomping us with a Deistic Millenium Copyright Act violation notice in the form of a 20-mile-wide asteroid.)
God: I created you by breathing life into dirt.
Man: Cool trick, God. We've learned to do the same thing.
God: Cool trick. Now try it from first principles.
Man: What do you mean?
God: Well, next time, make your own dirt.
And before you point out - correctly - that with a sufficiently large energy input we could indeed synthesize all the components that make up "dirt" out of hydrogen, you haven't solved the problem. Ultimately, it comes down to this:
God: Look, I appreciate the flattery, and I encourage you to keep at it. But read the job description -- you qualify for My job when you derive a universe capable of evolving intelligent life based on the setting of a small number of physical constants, and you can have My job when your resume' includes experimental proof in the form of a portfolio that includes your worshippers.
We hairless apes still have a bit of work to do.
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2, Funny)
Man: Cool trick, God. We've learned to do the same thing.
God: Cool trick. Now try it from first principles.
Man: What do you mean?
God: Well, next time, make your own dirt.
Man: Hey, God!
God: Now what?
Man: I think I figured out that last trick. [composters.com]
God: Doh.
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2)
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2)
Indeed. Where would they get the hydrogen and the energy? All methods of energy "production" that we are capable of are really just methods of converting what is already there.
My personal theory of LUE (Life the Universe and Everything) is that God made man to explore the creation of God of which man is a par
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2)
You should read Permutation City, by Greg Egan --- it's a seriously mind-blowing book where the characters do exactly that.
Exc
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2)
Re:Flattery'll only get you so far... (Score:2)
Only an insecure deity would want or need worship. Wouldn't it be embarrasing to have a deity with the divine equivalent of acne, a stupid laugh, and no social skills? The only form of worship I'd want is an occasional sapient showing up at the temple and saying things like, "Look! We have invented this excellent thing to do with grains; we call it 'beer'! Want to try some?"
finally! (Score:4, Funny)
The only question... (Score:2, Funny)
Imagine the greater system possibilities! (Score:4, Interesting)
How about a tree designed specifically to hide wireless cameras/microphones?
Home biological garbage disposals, like a fast-paced compost pile.
How about some easily controlled flying insectoid? You could tap into its optical system and save yourself the power of the cameras, just have the transmitter.
Of course I am ignoring the possibilities of abuse. They are both endless and quite horrifying.
wang work (Score:2)
"Diamond age" comes to mind (Score:2)
Was any part of design done by students living in hollow tubes under the ocean, having sex to let nanoprobes in their blood exchange information [wikipedia.org].
Living Computers? (Score:2)
Re:Living Computers? (Score:2)
Re:Living Computers? (Score:2)
Not just that, but we're also unable to make arbitrary changes to the code or hardware. And you can't make backups or restore a saved state.
Progress so far... (Score:2)
They are still trying to figure out how to make a printer, a floppy drive, and a mouse out DNA. Definitely promising technology though.
Interesting allusion (Score:2)
The only novel I've seen this in is Forge of the Elders [amazon.com] by L. Neil Smith. Awesome book, if, like me, you don't mind the libertarian propaganda.
outta here (Score:2)
Carlson Curves (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Carlson Curves (Score:3, Interesting)
As the Carlson in question, let me add the following thoughts.
First, to what physical limits are you referring? It's worth considering what the physical limits of biological technology might be. I don't think the answer is simple.
Second, a note on "Carlson Curves" (this is Oliver Morton's phrase, not mine): The plots were meant to provide a sense of how changes in technology are bringing about improvements in productivity in the lab, rather than to provide a quantitative prediction of the future. I am
About Playing God.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:About Playing God.. (Score:2)
Doesn't sound like a problem to me.
At least in the US, we are *supposed* to have politicians that we control... with our votes. But after a couple of centuries of American citizens dumbing down, that system is now corrupt. The politicans are now able to effectively control the majority of the population with negative campaign ads.
If the best scientific minds
What, still not here? (Score:2, Interesting)
I thought they'd ALREADY be, at least, close to releasing one.
It's interesting how many technologies take so much, much longer to come about than we'd like.
Flying car, I miss you
nice first step, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
Run For Your Lives (Score:2)
Re:Run For Your Lives (Score:2)
"Made by people, for people, from people!"
It's not just MIT .... (Score:3, Informative)
That being said, their idea of Biobricks is very innovative and they did host the first conference on the topic. So the popular press can be easily misled.
Genetic Programming Languages / Frameworks (Score:3, Interesting)
Anybody know of such coding or at least theortical hacks out there?
JsD
living computers? (Score:2)
Jack Vance's Houses of Iszm had this in 1954 (Score:2)
The 1954 novella "The Houses of Iszm" by Jack Vance postulated custom-grown treehouse homes. From Rich Horton's review [sff.net]:
novel drugs? (Score:2)
Ok, so it's not novel, but what's wrong with just growing your own cannabis? It's much easier !
I've actually worked with this, and... (Score:2, Informative)
Can I make a clone of Kelly LeBrock? (Score:3, Informative)
Debugging? (Score:2)
Do you think RIAA would get upset... (Score:2, Funny)
...if I downloaded Britney Spears' DNA?
Would they consider that stealing if someone just happened to be sharing it with me?
Synthetic Biology is Where Linux was before Linus (Score:2, Interesting)
The critical thing to understand is that this is OPEN SOURCE BIOLOGY ... bringing the same resources, intellectual curiosity and viewpoint fostered by the open source software community. There's not a biological GPL yet, but I believe there will be.
On the Dark Side, open source software's Darth Vader -- Bill Gates -- is an early player in synthetic biology. Check out that, th
Stephenson's Seed Technology? (Score:2)
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:5, Interesting)
or mechanics, or the two combined(whaaat? GUNS). so yeah, let's just dump it. let's not go there, let's put all scientific progress on statis.
or maybe gerbils are dangerous, they multiply(hell, rabbits have/are "dangerous" for some eco systems).
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
I know some libertarians argue that rights-respecting citizens should be allowed to own anything, from hydrogen bombs to smallpox strains, but, do you?
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
or the probability of them doing something that gets of hand AND that survives outside the lab.
why o why you even think they could automatically breed? you read too much scifi? that they would get in to the teleporter with y
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
is an automobile building robot 'reproducing'? why would a biological, quite fragile, machine get out of hand that way, except for the sake of a stupid plot o
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
sure, you could argue that "what IF there was terminators that uploaded themselfs out of gaming computers and into peoples brains and they started killing everyone" too but at this point that's just as likely as a nano/organ machine running foul(and adapting). you could just as well be fearing zombies.
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
Re:A Lil' Dangerous? (Score:2)
Re:I for one... (Score:5, Funny)
Get a clue (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Get a clue (Score:2)
"Yahweh appears to have been originally a sky god - a god of thunder and lightning. He was associated with mountains and was called by the enemies of Israel 'a god of the hills'. His manifestation was often as fire, as at Mount Sinai and in the burning bush."
"A shorter form, 'Yah', was also used (Exodus 15:2) and some scholars believe that this is the older form, originating in an exclamation to God - 'Yah!' -
Re:Get a clue (Score:2)
Re:Get a clue (Score:2)
Thanks for your informative and insightful comments moron.
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2, Informative)
No idea sorry, I'm agnostic myself. God would have to exist before I could hate him anyhow. A child can even prove that they exist, so why can't god manage to do such a small thing?
If you have no proof for God, maybe it is because God doesn't think that you deserve the proof.
Equally so, we have no proof for Santa Claus. Perhaps his elves have made him an invisible cloak too and we don't deserve proof from him. It's much more likely that you're just wishing.
The
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
Namely both are impossible.
God of the Christian faith (or at least my interpretation there of) is an infinite being
in all respects. (Omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, ect...) Man is a finite being, and therefore would not be able to perceive anything that is truly infinite. Just as it is impossible to find if a mathmatical set is infinite just by iterating through it with a finite value.
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but god would likely first have to exist for any interaction to actually occur and the rest of your comment is quite the mystic mumbo jumbo. As you've failed to demonstrate how this can happen, the rest of your argument are unquant
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
My post was really more philosophical then anything else. In short "There are more things on this Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of
in your Philosophy"
Saying that someone is wrong about their beliefs serves no purpose when those beliefs aren't readily demonstrable. To say that there is no god implies that you possess such a full knowledge of the world tha
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
in your Philosophy"
I certainly wouldn't disagree with this, but my essential point is that unless a thing is known and proven then it is fantasy unless proven.
Saying that someone is wrong about their beliefs serves no purpose when those beliefs aren't readily demonstrable. To say that there is no god implies that you possess such a full knowledge of the world that you in f
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
Re:Atheists are addicted to prosoltising their hat (Score:2)
You need some punctuation to make sense of that, either "What is up with you God, hating Atheists?" or "What is up with you God-hating Atheists?"
Re:geez (Score:2)
http://www.bartleby.com/64/C001/020.html
http:
(and many other sites.)
The quoted usage is valid, if applied consistent.
R C
Re:geez (Score:2)
Go post your complaint on GrammarDot or something...
Re:geez (Score:2)
I agree with your reaction however, the things I see make me think people are idiots. Even worser idiots than myself.
Re:DNA Patents? (Score:3, Informative)
Iceland, DeCode. Google it.