Monday, March 27, 2023

It's All Connected


It isn't hard to come to the realization that one of the common denominators in almost all of the existential threats currently facing humanity is our flawed natures; human folly, shortsightedness and credulity have much to answer for. Climate change, resource depletion and pandemics readily come to mind as examples of what our collective folly has led to.

Were we apt students of life, we would realize that our refusal to think critically makes us our own worst enemy. Connecting the dots should not be the gargantuan task that it is for far too many people. 

Today's Star examines the inevitability of another pandemic and the things scientists are doing to prepare for it. One such scientist is Gerry Wright, a McMaster professor in biochemistry and biomedicine, who identifies a major impediment in meeting the next pandemic.

Gerry Wright feels confident that science will find the solutions to the next pandemic.

Perhaps not as quickly as we’d like. And not without obstacles. The race to fight COVID, which drew on decades of research, revealed how quickly scientists could rally.

But the flip side to these successes is the corresponding and deeply alarming rise in misinformation online.

 “The thing that terrifies me is that a person with an iPhone can think they’re an expert,” he says. “That people think their opinions matter just as much as those of people who’ve dedicated their lives to understanding science — and that this is now almost a widely accepted concept — is going to result in a super-dangerous future.”

The claims of false cures, promoted by people like Trump, served as a major stumbling block in attacking Covid.

Wright says he first became alarmed in 2020, when then U.S. president Donald Trump flouted the advice of top science agencies by touting the unproven benefits of the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID.

He says his worries deepened the following year when ivermectin, an antiparasitic medicine used to treat some human conditions and which is also a veterinary drug, was falsely hyped as a COVID miracle cure, even as effective vaccines were being rolled out.

“I just knew that we were in deep, deep trouble.”

While McMaster researchers worked flat out to find solutions for COVID, Wright says he knew it was equally pressing to combat misinformation.

He now heads the Global Nexus for Pandemics and Biologic Threats, a McMaster-led initiative that brings together scientists and medical researchers, along with experts in economics, political science and the social sciences. 
“I understand molecules. I don’t understand people,” says Wright, noting the hub will also provide interdisciplinary training for students, so they can think across typically siloed fields. 

One has to wonder if such efforts will be sufficient, given the new capacities for deception driven by A.I.-generated imagery and voice mimicking. And remember that there will always be those who will quite eagerly exploit such technology for their own diabolical ends.

As it has always been, the fate of humanity rests in our hands and in our minds. Not too much reason for optimism, is there?

 

 


3 comments:

  1. Recent studies have found average intelligence in America is declined somewhat. I doubt that is a uniquely American phenomenon. We know that learning patterns have been altered by social media and smartphones that, among other things, have degraded attention span. Now there's a great deal of concern that AI will worsen our mental afflictions and competence. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/mar/23/tech-guru-jaron-lanier-the-danger-isnt-that-ai-destroys-us-its-that-it-drives-us-insane?CMP=share_btn_fb&fbclid=IwAR1EdTcOe-qnnpCKcY0KDkdIXa1hmh3I7L7FCCwx6F0WrpEZzydUZrowAvI
    and this: https://bigthink.com/the-future/anthropomorphize-ai/?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR3H4ySZtPvO9DWM3DqbJfKFLKMvMLdsd4P-qSTNcwv7GKtolXTD3aCEPqI#Echobox=1679763800 - MoS

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    1. Thanks for the links, Mound. I shall read them with interest. It is said that when the oral tradition thrived, people had prodigious memories. If that is true, we can better-appreciate how tech has and will continue to contribute to our cerebral decline.

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  2. The Greeks understood that the essence of tragedy was human frailty, Lorne. Nothing has happened to alter their conclusion.

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