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+Shifting away from nuclear power increases nanotech. |
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+Hitoshi Nasu 13 (senior lecturer in law at the Australian National University, where he teaches international humanitarian and security law, military operations law, and migration law. He is the lead investigator for an Australian Research Council project on Australia’s legal response to the military and security applications of nanotechnology.), and Thomas Faunce. "Nanotechnology in Japan: A route to energy security after Fukushima?." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 69.5 (2013): 68-74. |
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+Japan’s latest nanotechnology policy is subservient to four basic societal goals set out in the |
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+AND |
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+carbon dioxide into fuels such as methanol (Faunce et al., 2013a). |
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+Nanotech leads to grey goo, which causes extinction and turns case. |
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+Mark Prado 12 (Mark Prado, a space systems physicist, is the President and CEO of Permanent Space Resources, Inc.) “Nanotechnology.” GAIN (Genetics, Artificial Intelligence, and Nanotechnology). 2012. http://www.gainextinction.com/nanotechnology.html |
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+Some nanotechnology researchers are looking into ways to manufacture nano products by, for example |
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+AND |
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+as human extinction or sudden ecosystem destruction. We see that rampantly already. |
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+Nanotech is the most likely scenario for extinction. The author accounts for environmental harms and conflict. |
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+Sean Coughlan 13 (BBC News education correspondent). “How are humans going to become extinct?” April 24th, 2013. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-22002530 |
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+The Swedish-born director of the institute, Nick Bostrom, says the stakes |
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+AND |
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+that future governments will have a major challenge to control and restrict misuses. |