What does human ability depend on throughout the history of science? Can governments and statesmen give research a faster path? Is it possible to gather researchers in one place instead of brain drain and give a new direction so that the whole world community can benefit from it, like this Spinger magazine in Germany?
What does human ability depend on throughout the history of science? Can governments and statesmen give research a faster path? Is it possible to gather researchers in one place instead of brain drain and give a new direction so that the whole world community can benefit from it, like this Spinger magazine in Germany?
We humans can plan for the future, and in my opinion, we can use this science for all of our society, and this is not possible unless we use it for all of the world society, like the German Spinger magazine, and this magazine, in my opinion, should be wider than This journal can work and when the stages of science and research in the society become more widespread, we can use it for all the world society and everyone will enter into these researches and all societies will achieve progress, provided that the right of the researcher is also taken into account. And it should not be that the researchers do scientific work and not be given any rights and privileges, and it is not fair that the researchers have the world. And I suggest to Spinger magazine to take the rights and rights of the researchers and give them to the researchers. Thank you for the German magazine Spinger.
Stephen I. Ternyik added a reply:
With respect to the history of science, the Manhattan Project is such an example of research acceleration and building an academic assembly line Abbas Kashani . Today, AI tools can to accerlate such projects without locating scientists in one place.
Imo only, your question should also consider the ethical implications of scientific developments.
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All of our exalted technological progress, civilization for that matter, is comparable to an axe in the hand of a pathological criminal.
— Albert Einstein