My Favorite German Human-Robots
via 3quarksdaily

There’s an excellent set of articles from Gizmodo this week “exploring the enhanced human future,” including:
-an interview with Michael Specter, “Synthetic Biology: Why Not Pursuing Crazy Biotech is dangerous”
-an article about tissue engineering and skin grafts: “Meat Band-Aids and Mass Production of Living Tissue”
-human/machine interfaces to enhance our hearing and sexual experiences (NSFW, obviously), replace our bowels after horrific motorcycle accidents, and much, much more!
According to gizmodo, this cyborg life is “about what happens when we treat our body less as a sacred object and more as what it is: Nature’s ultimate machine.” I find this stance fascinating, and perhaps too complicated for me to really think about now as I’m still recovering from an all too human cold, so I’ll leave off with some questions to mull over. Are we really machines, or does the ability to interface with non-living technology make us so? Is the dichotomy between “sacred objects” and “machines” a false binary? Is there another option? Are we really the ultimate machine? Can there be a pinnacle, an end, a goal for evolution?

Living Light is a permanent outdoor pavilion in the heart of Seoul with a dynamic skin that glows and blinks in response to both data about air quality and public interest in the environment. Citizens can enter the pavilion or view it from nearby streets and buildings, and they can text message the building and it will text them back.
via BLDGBLOG

Of Robots, Androids, and Cyborgs…
“Cyborg/biomechanoid—A being who is a “synthesis of organic and synthetic parts.”
Scientists love analogies; they make it easier to discuss and understand complicated systems in terms of things that are familiar to many people. Synthetic biology is still trying to define itself, but the analogy that prevails thus far is synthetic biology:biology/life::electrical engineering:physics. With the data from decades of biological research, we can put together novel biological pathways and maybe even whole genomes, creating new living “circuitry”.
Since the industrial revolution, Nature has been seen as both a source of resources to be used and shaped into human invention, but also as somewhat of a machine itself, something that has parts that can be systematically understood and then used as a tool [1]. As technology has developed to embrace the digital machine, our analogies for Nature and specifically biology have changed with it. In synthetic biology we have DNA as “software”, genes as “parts”, biochemistry as “logic gates”, all the way up to cells as computers and networks [2].
With this kind of analogy in place, synthetic biology can make “devices” that behave like toggle switches, logic gates, diodes, or oscillators, and even develop real computer software to help build living circuits like you would electronic circuits. This intertwining of biology and electrical engineering has almost moved beyond simple analogy, that biological molecules are electrical components (I too am guilty of this) and that progress in synthetic biology will mirror progress in computer engineering in the 20th century.
This analogy is useful, and certainly interesting, but is it limiting? Biology does a lot of amazing things that computers can’t (yet?), and vice-versa. There are some people working on cyborg interfaces between computers and cells as a way to take advantage of both (see the Harvard 2008 iGEM project, for example) but in a lot of ways cells and computers are not alike in what they are, what they do, and how we interact with them (and that’s ok). I think most importantly, this kind of analogy doesn’t really take into account the basic science implications of synthetic biology as a tool.
I’m not sure if we need an analogy at all, but the one that I like the best is synthetic biology:biology::synthetic chemistry:chemistry from Brian Yeh and Wendell Lim’s 2007 Commentary “Synthetic biology: lessons from the history of synthetic organic chemistry” [3].
Chemical synthesis of organic compounds in the mid 1800’s shattered the notion that there is something magical about the chemicals that make up living systems. Most importantly, synthesis led to enormous insights into the physical structure of molecules. Despite the very limited knowledge of chemistry that existed at the time of the first synthetic projects, attempts at creating molecules opened up new avenues for learning about chemistry, with obvious implications for how we make drugs, dyes, plastics, food etc.
We may be at such a turning point now. There is a lot that we don’t know about how cells work, but attempts at synthesizing rudimentary biological pathways will possibly allow synthetic biologists to better understand how cells work, and will very likely develop many useful technologies and research tools along the way. In the end synthetic biology may redefine biological engineering and the study of biology into something uniquely different.