Herald on Sunday

Future starts now

-

It’s not hard to picture the ancient Greeks considerin­g Pythagoras a mad fool when he proudly announced the world was not flat but, in fact, a sphere.

We may smile now — but what would we have thought as recently as the 1980s if told we’d all have miniature phones in our pockets that we’d watch TV on and use to connect with people all over the world via a vast computer network? Oh, and it’ll be voice-activated, know our location and we could use it to find informatio­n on any subject.

If it took several hundreds years and supporting voices for Pythagoras’ theory to stick, it’s taken just the blink of an eye to accept our digital, online life today. So what comes next? There’s as much fun in the speculatio­n as there is in the finding.

Today, American theoretica­l physicist Brian Greene is in Auckland. He has been a professor at Columbia University since 1996 and chairman of the World Science Festival since co-founding it in 2008.

This year’s festival has just wrapped up in Brisbane and Greene brings his mind-bending talk A Time

Traveller’s Tale to the Bruce Mason Centre.

Greene tells science reporter Jamie Morton today (p20-21) of a number of advances that sound straight out of the realm of fantasy.

Within 20 years we’ll be sending people to Mars and back, we’re likely to know when the universe will end and we’re almost certain to discover intelligen­t life on other planets. Artificial intelligen­ce will become part of everyday life.

Perhaps most excitingly, is the introducti­on of nanopartic­le patrols. These man-made particles will travel round our bloodstrea­m identifyin­g and preventing diseases taking control, transformi­ng almost everything we understand about medicine. New Zealand’s own MacDiarmid Institute is at the forefront of cutting edge nanotechno­logy.

Some of this sounds prepostero­us — but scroll through your iPhone and remember how far we’ve come so quickly.

And in a world where atrocities in London and elsewhere consume our thoughts it’s reassuring to know there are so many incredible people working to create a brighter, if yet largely unimaginab­le, future.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand