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by nitrogen
1968 days ago
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Despite the common trope that software/hardware engineers think they understand everything, automation can make exponential development possible in bio. I know someone who works at a biotech company, and the stories I hear lead me to believe that traditional thinking in e.g. medicine and insurance, and from colleagues, really is a bottleneck. Maybe exponential growth will never apply to the number of diseases cured, but it can and should apply to the hardware and software that facilitates the next iteration of biological discovery. |
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I'm not speaking about running hospitals or dancing with insurance companies. I'm speaking about much earlier in the pipeline: fundamental, blue-sky biological research is fundamentally different from software. The reason is that we are not studying designed systems; the effect is that there is so much that we don't know that we don't know that things that sound easy are in fact basically impossible because the prior knowledge is simply not established. (Until they aren't. When does that change? First slowly, then all at once.)
As a biomedical engineer, i'm on board with hardware and software improvements: it's kind of my job. The trick is knowing what you're doing, what you aren't, and what you can expect, and to balance confidence in the value of what you _can_ tightly constrain and design versus humility in accepting that the natural world simply doesn't care.