Nanotechnology/Nano and Society/Correspondence

from	Rich Doyle  to	krm@mic.dtu.dk date	Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 2:48 AM subject	Nanotechnology Wikibook mailed-by	gmail.com hide details 12/14/08 Reply Kristian,

I am professor at Penn State, where along with Profs Mark Horn and Richard Devon, I will be teaching an undergraduate engineering course on nanotechnology design in the context of the ethical implications of nanotechnology. I was delighted to find your open source nanotechnology handbook on wikibooks. Together with our students, we will work to add content where appropriate, especially in the nanotech and society pages.

Our course description is wiki'd here:

http://biotelemetrica.pbwiki.com/NanoNano

Thanks again for an excellent start to the wikibook!

Sincerely,

Richard Doyle (US)

-- "...everything fits into the moist, pulsating pattern...." Timothy Leary Om gate gate paragate parasamgate bodhi svaha! The Heart Sutra

Richard Doyle US Delegate, IEC TC 25/WG 5 - Expert, Wetwares and Human/Machine Interaction Professor English/Science Technology & Society/Information Science and Technology Penn State University http://biotelemetrica.pbwiki.com/DoyleBio

from	Kristian Mølhave  to	Rich Doyle  date	Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 6:26 AM subject	RE: Nanotechnology Wikibook hide details 12/14/08 Reply Dear Rich

That sounds wonderful - exactly the kind of activity I was hoping it would generate!

Good luck and let me know if I can help (though my time is somewhat limited).

Any comments and ideas for the overall structure of the book are also very welcome!

With best regards Kristian ___________________________ Kristian Mølhave Associate Professor, Ph.D. Dept. of Micro and Nanotechnology 345e-154 - www.nanotech.dtu.dk  Technical University of Denmark - DTU Mobile Phone (0045) 2512 6672 Email: kristian@molhave.dk  / kristian.molhave@nanotech.dtu.dk  http://kristian.molhave.dk 

Hi again Rich

Attached are some notes for an update of the nano and society chapter that I once began doing but never found time to finish working on (partly because I missed someone to write it with - so you come in very handy!). It contains ideas and resources you might find useful - feel free to use it!

With best regards Kristian