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iNstein t1_j6axjgc wrote

I have a very detailed scientific book written by Erik K Drexler who goes into exactly how they would work with detailed maths and diagrams together with simulations. You can believe some gummy bear on the internet spewing their uneducated opinion or you could keep an open mind based on this book written by an accomplished man. I know which side I am leaning.

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kalavala93 OP t1_j6b0f7t wrote

I'd love to read it.

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iNstein t1_j6b1hyb wrote

This is it: https://www.amazon.com/Nanosystems-P-K-Eric-Drexler/dp/0471575186/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?crid=2NH4KYQJHLBCC&keywords=Drexler+nanosystems&qid=1674955358&sprefix=drexler+nanosystems%2Caps%2C348&sr=8-1

Looks like there is one copy left in stock. It is really heavy going tho, you need at least uni level education and probably a lot more.

Edit to add, ISBN is: 0-471-57518-6

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kalavala93 OP t1_j6beugy wrote

Don't have a uni education but I'm a cloud infrastructure engineer. I'll probably be fine.

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Molnan t1_j6ie2c5 wrote

You'll be fine but it's a long, dry book. I'd start with "Engines of Creation", which is way more fun to read and provides all the basic notions. The Wikipedia entry mentions an "updated version" (from 2007), feely available online. The link is to a web archive of a pdf, but it works. I only recall reading the 1986 version, which I think is still very much relevant despite its age. A more recent introductory text by Drexler is Radical Abundance (2013), but I haven't read it. I say, read Engines, then skim through Nanosystems and keep it for reference, and get deeper into sections you find particularly interesting or where some frequent doubt or objection is addressed.

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kalavala93 OP t1_j6b0h3n wrote

Btw I didn't say I believed him, in fact I don't want too. I just wanted the forums opinion.

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