Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   Medical and Health Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/medical-health-discussion-94/)
-   -   How this pandemic will save millions of lives. Nanites (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/medical-health-discussion-94/how-pandemic-will-save-millions-lives-nanites-322546/)

CFrance 08-07-2021 07:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GeriS (Post 1985057)
Look up Project Looking Glass...use Duckduckgo.com to avoid google banning.

Why? And what is google banning?

msilagy 08-07-2021 07:19 AM

Thanks for the link to the TED talk. I was interested in learning the technology of mRNA. It may be way over most people's interest level. I spent 30 years in Pharma so it was music to my ears.

Windguy 08-07-2021 07:34 AM

If the subject of nanites interests you, give Greg Bear’s SF novel “Blood Music” a read. One of my all-time favorites.

Blood Music (novel) - Wikipedia

FromNY 08-07-2021 07:43 AM

Fantasy? Not on a bet. Imagine life if all the scientists and inventors sat on their butts .
Phones on our wrists? Fantasy? Pills that save life? In ancient times herbs were used. Those herbs were the foundations for medications you take. Oh and many were persecuted for using them. to heal. Edison was laughed at. Ben Franklin was eccentric. Washing hands was once thought of as evil. Hey what about the Fantasy that occurred when someone invented a pipe and bowl to dispose of your human waste. Necessity IS the Mother of invention. Too bad narrow minded thinkers are not interested in learning history . Thank you to the poster for shaking a stagnant mind! We need as a human race to move forward. Without science and without learning we are doomed.

CFrance 08-07-2021 07:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MDLNB (Post 1985128)
I've seen the "Travelers" series and knew before I started watching it that it was SyFy. I also watched "Dumbo" when I was a child, but have never expected, but still waiting for elephants to fly.

Tell me that the Covid vaccine is little tiny metal robots and I will decline a booster shot. Actually, at this time I am prepared to decline the booster anyway.

She was using metaphors and similes to bring it through on a level non-scientific people could understand. Most people would realize that the whole story is a lot more complicated.

Boomer 08-07-2021 08:11 AM

Thank you, Ben Franklin. I will watch the Ted Talk later, but, for now, I looked up this brilliant scientist. . .

Kathryn Whitehead’s work as a “drug delivery engineer” is finding a way to deliver cancer treatment to target only the bad cells while leaving the healthy ones alone.

When discussing the genre of science fiction with students, I always said that good science fiction, no matter how far out its premise might seem to be, should contain a seed of something that makes us think, “Could something like this really happen? Do we see anything around us in our current time that makes us think about this story?”

As an example, one of the stories we read was Isaac Asimov’s “The Feeling of Power.” It is set in a future of space wars. Battles were being waged by spaceships run only by computers on board.

Then the government finds a man who can do math in his head — by then that ability has been long lost because computers do all the math. Those in power direct him to teach others how to do math in their heads — because it will be much cheaper to put a person on those warring spaceships instead of a computer.

That Asimov story has been around for a long time. But here we are in a time when most of us use calculators for our math and computers are doing the big math. And kids go to school clutching calculators.

Of course, as you know, science fiction is not written to be literal. The good science fiction makes us think, “What if?”

(It sounds like the “What if.” leap from the science fiction you talk about to the reality of the hope for targeted cancer treatment is a good one to think about. I am thankful we have brilliant scientists like Kathryn Whitehead.)
Boomer

Topspinmo 08-07-2021 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CFrance (Post 1985146)
Why? And what is google banning?


The big social media technology CEO’s called before congress, had to answer questions and I think we know why?

DaleDivine 08-07-2021 08:44 AM

Way above my pay grade...
:ohdear::ohdear:

brick010207 08-07-2021 08:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FromNY (Post 1985173)
Fantasy? Not on a bet. Imagine life if all the scientists and inventors sat on their butts .
Phones on our wrists? Fantasy? Pills that save life? In ancient times herbs were used. Those herbs were the foundations for medications you take. Oh and many were persecuted for using them. to heal. Edison was laughed at. Ben Franklin was eccentric. Washing hands was once thought of as evil. Hey what about the Fantasy that occurred when someone invented a pipe and bowl to dispose of your human waste. Necessity IS the Mother of invention. Too bad narrow minded thinkers are not interested in learning history . Thank you to the poster for shaking a stagnant mind! We need as a human race to move forward. Without science and without learning we are doomed.

Thanks. You said just what I was thinking. Here's a quote I think that applies to most of the regulars on TOTV:

"I've lost my mind and I'm worried that it's such a small thing to be wandering around on its own"!

Dilligas 08-07-2021 12:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben Franklin (Post 1984817)
I recently finished the TV series Travelers. It is a series about people from the future traveling back to our time trying to save us from destroying the earth. They had advance medical procedures using nanites and now it's a reality. The show was first produced in 2016. The following is a TED Talk.

Kathryn A. Whitehead: The tiny balls of fat that could revolutionize medicine | TED Talk

Hopefully people will watch TED Talks and not rely on what they can find on the internet to feed their beliefs. If so, and witht he fact that 95% of C-19 hospitalizations and 99% of C-19 deaths, are to the unvaccinated. mRNA vaccines are for real, although not fully approved by FDA, they have 100s of million tests in the USA and more in the world to provide the necessary effectiveness. Please get vaccinated.

drducat 08-07-2021 12:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dilligas (Post 1985376)
Hopefully people will watch TED Talks and not rely on what they can find on the internet to feed their beliefs. If so, and witht he fact that 95% of C-19 hospitalizations and 99% of C-19 deaths, are to the unvaccinated. mRNA vaccines are for real, although not fully approved by FDA, they have 100s of million tests in the USA and more in the world to provide the necessary effectiveness. Please get vaccinated.

She said all I need to know...She called it a Therapeutic.....Not a vaccine....a bandaid, just like tylenol. :eek: Someone has been had......:ohdear:

Ben Franklin 08-07-2021 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GeriS (Post 1985057)
Look up Project Looking Glass...use Duckduckgo.com to avoid google banning.

I found it on Google. Why would they ban it?

Ben Franklin 08-07-2021 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boomer (Post 1985195)
Thank you, Ben Franklin. I will watch the Ted Talk later, but, for now, I looked up this brilliant scientist. . .

Kathryn Whitehead’s work as a “drug delivery engineer” is finding a way to deliver cancer treatment to target only the bad cells while leaving the healthy ones alone.

When discussing the genre of science fiction with students, I always said that good science fiction, no matter how far out its premise might seem to be, should contain a seed of something that makes us think, “Could something like this really happen? Do we see anything around us in our current time that makes us think about this story?”

As an example, one of the stories we read was Isaac Asimov’s “The Feeling of Power.” It is set in a future of space wars. Battles were being waged by spaceships run only by computers on board.

Then the government finds a man who can do math in his head — by then that ability has been long lost because computers do all the math. Those in power direct him to teach others how to do math in their heads — because it will be much cheaper to put a person on those warring spaceships instead of a computer.

That Asimov story has been around for a long time. But here we are in a time when most of us use calculators for our math and computers are doing the big math. And kids go to school clutching calculators.

Of course, as you know, science fiction is not written to be literal. The good science fiction makes us think, “What if?”

(It sounds like the “What if.” leap from the science fiction you talk about to the reality of the hope for targeted cancer treatment is a good one to think about. I am thankful we have brilliant scientists like Kathryn Whitehead.)
Boomer

I think good, solid sci fi is written by people who read what's going on behind the scene and they expand on what it might be like in the future. Dick Tracey comes to mind. And although not science fiction, he did have a watch he could use to communicate on. An Apple Watch. ;-)

The scary part is when the writer doesn't see any positive ending. In Travelers the last episode left me depressed. Although a writer can take an experimental product and make it positive, they still don't know how man will use it.

Ben Franklin 08-08-2021 10:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MDLNB (Post 1985128)
I've seen the "Travelers" series and knew before I started watching it that it was SyFy. I also watched "Dumbo" when I was a child, but have never expected, but still waiting for elephants to fly.

Tell me that the Covid vaccine is little tiny metal robots and I will decline a booster shot. Actually, at this time I am prepared to decline the booster anyway.

Yes, I knew it was sci-fi too, before I started watching it. It's why I watched it, so I don't understand your comment. It was the nanites, that their medical team used, to heal someone, that I thought was fantasy.

This is real. Treating cancer with nanorobots - Advanced Science News

MDLNB 08-08-2021 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben Franklin (Post 1985817)
Yes, I knew it was sci-fi too, before I started watching it. It's why I watched it, so I don't understand your comment. It was the nanites, that their medical team used, to heal someone, that I thought was fantasy.

This is real. Treating cancer with nanorobots - Advanced Science News


I was being facetious, in case that helps you "understand."

I also enjoy Sci-Fi. Not all of it is positive and not all of it tells the future, I hope. I have watched several movies that had a similar theme. One that I remember somewhat was about a deadly disease that hit the world and a cure was hastily initiated. Unfortunately, the cure was mandated to all before it was discovered that children were practically sterilized by the serum and all pregnancies ended up aborting. They discovered that only one person was able to conceive in the whole world. Fantasy of course, but just as a possible preview to the future as "nanobots."

But, that was just fiction, of course.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:39 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.