Feynman (MLA Citation)
Plenty Room at Bottom
There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom
At the dawn of the 1960's the world was entering a new age of great technological advancements which Richard P. Feynman discussed in a speech that has been immortalized in print ever since. In "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom," Feynman, a physicist, discussed a simple question, how small can one go? In other words, he pondered the idea of tiny machines and discussed how one could go about building them. The "bottom" he argued was the infinitesimal space that one encounters as they become smaller and smaller; and as one entered the realm of the minuscule they could find an almost limitless amount of space in which to operate.
Feynman began his discussion with the idea of printing the entire Encyclopedia Britannica on the head of a pin. After examining the physics of performing such a feat, he came to the conclusion that it was not only possible, but that it was technologically feasible. Through the use of microscopes and other means, printing the entire encyclopedia on the head of a pin could indeed be done. Which brought Feynman to the next question, how could something be written that small? Even with 1950's technology, Feynman postulated a number of means by which this could be accomplished ranging from miniaturized etching to light beams. But the reason why humans would want to do such things was what Feynman believed was truly important: the transmission of large amounts of information easily and efficiently. By demonstrating that information can be transferred through amazingly small print, Feynman provided just one reason why smaller can be better.
The transfer of information through smaller and smaller means is just a way for humans to copy the way nature has been operating. For example, Feynman and his colleagues...
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