Advertisement

Insatiable Curiosity: Innovation in a Fragile Future
Review by Elizabeth Quill
Web edition : Friday, November 21st, 2008
Text Size
access
Insatiable Curiosity: Innovation in a Fragile Future by Helga Nowotny

Translated by Mitch Cohen

The only way is forward, so be bold, Nowotny tells those who fear the uncertainty of the future. Vice President of the European Research Council, Nowotny has researched and written extensively on the intersections of science, technology and society. In this meditation, she makes a reasoned argument for embracing scientific progress despite its sometimes unsettling consequences.

Nowotny’s mind moves quickly, meandering from point to point without returning to recap or summarize. She goes to great lengths to distinguish science from technology, and curiosity from innovation. She touches on barriers to creativity, the role of failure in discovery, science’s declining reputation and the need to communicate its progress.

Nowotny returns to curiosity again and again. “Curiosity, insatiable as it is, thereby drives us forward,” she writes. It seeks new paths, takes risks, subverts limits. “It poses questions that are not permitted, and unwise as it is, it presses for action even where it should draw back.”

With more success, there is more curiosity, but also more at stake, Nowotny argues. While biomedical advances have brought health, long life and new reproductive possibilities, such advances have also brought doubts about the definition of self and the value of life. But, she continues, humanity will always push on because “standing still is tantamount to falling back.” 

Ambivalence—uncertainty about which path to follow in any aspect of life—arises from a wealth not a lack of knowledge, she concludes, and ambivalence is also a cultural resource destined to promote progress.

MIT, 2008, 179 p., $30

Comments

Please alert Science News to any inappropriate posts by clicking the REPORT SPAM link within the post. Comments will be reviewed before posting.

Registered readers are invited to post a comment. To encourage fruitful discussion, please keep your comments relevant, brief and courteous. Offensive, irrelevant, nonsensical and commercial posts will not be published. (All links will be removed from comments.)

You must register with Science News to add a comment. To log-in click here. To register as a new user, follow this link.