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About

This is the new website of the Center. The old website became unreachable after its server was damaged during the renovation of the Faculty of Arts building back in 2017. Nonetheless, you can find information from the old website through the Web Archive website. Furthermore, the Center also maintains a lively Facebook page.

The Center for Ethics of Science and Technology is a research unit at the Faculty of Arts at Chulalongkorn University. It is a virtual interdisciplinary center where faculty collaborate, not only within Chulalongkorn University but with other universities and research institutes worldwide. The Center also hosts Digital Divide Institute, a leading international think tank whose model of Meaningful Broadband is being applied by Asian governments to close the Digital Divide.

Today’s world is one in which science and technology play an essential role in almost every aspect of life. Almost all the changes that are taking place are due to advances in science and technology, as can be seen in the emergence of the internet, which enable information to explode exponentially in the past few years, and biotechnology, which has made such scenarios as human cloning and genetic manipulation of organisms an everyday reality.

These advances naturally create a whole set of problems that have hitherto been non-existent just a few years ago. For example, who would have thought that the internet would have grown so fast and has become so pervasive in virtually all aspects of life, so much so that it has well become the lifeblood of humans’ communicative activities and has the potential of ‘taking over’ the real world and to replace it with its own world where everything, both real and unreal, is ‘indexed’ (or ‘googled’) and has value tagged on. A clear problem is a digital divide between those who enjoy the benefits brought about by technology and those who are left behind. Another well-known problem is how the privacy of citizens is going to be protected when every corner of reality has become item in the manipulable and calculable “information reality” (Borgmann 1999).

Furthermore, another important aspect of today’s advances in technology is evident in biotechnology. The success of cloning mammals, on the one hand, is the first step in research on new ways of treating hitherto intractable diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease through culturing of stem cells. But on the other hand, it is well known that the possibility of getting fertilized cells of potential human beings and manipulate them to serve the needs of patients is ethically problematic. The world is now engaged in a series of wide-ranging debates on the moral of stem cell research. Moreover, genetic manipulation technology has also created no less heated controversies, as plants and animals are now malleable to the needs or perhaps desires of human beings. Many very difficult problems, ones not confined to the technical nature of these advances alone, lie ahead.

These advances, in addition, are pertinent not only to the developed Western world but the developing world such as Thailand has inevitably felt the impact created by these rapid advances. The spread of the Internet to the developing world has prompted many to say that there are overt or covert attempts to ‘colonize the consciousness’ of the population in the developing world (Hershock 1999), where the thinking and beliefs of the latter are manipulated through the information technology by those in the developed world. The spread of biotechnology has also created the same type of problems.

In order to contribute to the attempts to find solutions to all these difficult problems, the Center for Ethics of Science and Technology has been established at Chulalongkorn University to help solve these problems. It also acts as a focal point in the region and aims at becoming a center of excellence in the area too.

Objectives

  • Conduct research on various aspects of ethics of science and technology, most notably those related to information technology and biotechnology, as well as the relation between science and society.
  • Act as a focal point on the attempts to understand how science and technology interact with society and culture, especially in the South-east Asian context.
  • Disseminate knowledge and perform outreaching programs to be the general public.

3 replies on “About”

Dear Soraj,

I am quite impressed by the blog of CEST. The ethics of Science and Technology is one of the subject needs to be promoted in the Cambodian context as well. I hope to learn more from you and your team.

Best wishes,

Happy New Year!

Dear Chanroeun,

I am glad you like the blog. If there’s anything I can help please let me know. We can always work together.

Best wishes,
Soraj

Hi there,

I thought that you may be interested to know that this year’s Templeton Prize winner will be announced on Thursday 25th March at 15:00 GMT (11:00 EST) in Washington D.C. The £1,000,000 prize is awarded annually to outstanding individuals who have devoted their talents to life’s big questions. You can register for the webcast at http://bit.ly/d7soUA and you have the chance to pose questions to the new winner.

If you do not wish to receive further information about the Templeton Prize please email: sgillespie@bell-pottinger.co.uk

DIARY NOTE

38th TEMPLETON PRIZE WINNER TO BE ANNOUNCED

Event: News conference

Date: 25 March 2010, 15.00 GMT

Venue: Washington DC – National Academy of Sciences

Live webcast: http://www.templetonprize.org

The world’s largest annual award, the £1,000,000 Templeton prize, will be announced on Thursday 25 March at 15.00 GMT at a press conference in Washington DC and broadcast live online.

The winner will be a major international academic figure who has made a significant contribution to the study and understanding of new scientific discoveries and to one of life’s big questions: Does scientific knowledge contradict religious belief?

The £1million Templeton Prize, monetarily the largest award given to an individual, honours a living person who has made an exceptional contribution to affirming life’s spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery or practical works.

The 2010 Prize laureate will join a distinguished group of former recipients including Mother Teresa and Soviet dissident, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn alongside scientists such as Professor Freeman J. Dyson and the Nobel Prize-winning physicist, Professor Charles Townes;.

Statements will be made by the new Templeton Laureate and the Templeton Foundation’s President, Dr John Templeton Jr and both will be available for questions.

Last year’s award went to Bernard d’Espagnat, a French physicist and philosopher of science whose explorations of the philosophical implications of quantum physics have opened new vistas on the definition of reality and the potential limits of knowable science.

Speaker and Templeton Foundation interviews are available by contacting +44 20 7861 3974.

Speak to either:

James Carron

Sally Gillespie

Information on the 2010 Templeton Prize Laureate can be provided in advance under strict embargo.

Contact James Carron at +44 207 861 2494 / jcarron@bell-pottinger.co.uk or Sally Gillespie at +44 207 861 3974 / sgillespie@bell-pottinger.co.uk

Notes to editors

1. The Templeton Prize was created by global investor and philanthropist Sir John Templeton and was established in 1972.

2. The Templeton Prize is a cornerstone of the John Templeton Foundation’s international efforts to serve as a philanthropic catalyst for discovery in areas engaging life’s biggest questions, ranging from explorations into the laws of nature and the universe to questions on the nature of love, gratitude, forgiveness, and creativity.

3. The Templeton Prize aims to identify “entrepreneurs of the spirit”, outstanding individuals who have devoted their talents to expanding notions or understanding about ultimate purpose and reality.

4. The Templeton Prize is awarded annually on the decision of a panel of independent judges. Past judges have included the Dalai Lama, Professor Sir Brian Heap and Professor Paul Davies.

5. For more information on the John Templeton Foundation and the Templeton Prize, visit http://www.templeton.org and http://www.templetonprize.org.

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