GE108 Module FINALS
GE108 Module FINALS
GE108 Module FINALS
GE 108
Science, Technology and Society
Overview
Highly modernized, automated, data-driven, and technologically advanced-these best describe our
society nowadays, as evidenced by how information could be transferred or shared quickly. The different
areas of society have been influenced tremendously such as communication, economics, industry, health,
and the environment. Despite our gains due to the growing development of information technology, the
rapid upgrade of information also has disadvantages. This lesson will discuss the history and impact of
technological advancements to society.
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 9
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History of the Information Age
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Third Information Revolution
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Impact of the Information Age
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The Information Age has also the following downsides:
Activity:
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 10
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Patterns of Biodiversity
Importance of Biodiversity
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Threats to Biodiversity
1. Habitat loss and destruction
2. Alterations in ecosystem composition
3. Over-exploitation: over-hunting, overfishing, or over-collecting of species
4. Pollution and contamination
5. Global climate change
6. Diseases
Biodiversity Loss
This refers to the depletion or reduction of biological diversity due to extinction of species. It will
result to the death of ecosystems worldwide, resulting to ending and changing of ecosystem services. It is
predicted that half of the world species will be extinct by 2050.
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 11
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Uses of GMOs
Benefits of GMOs
• Higher efficiency in farming
There will be less use for herbicides/pesticides, and lower cost for labor and cultivation.
• Increase in harvest
GMO crops resistant to pests and diseases mean increase in potential growth and harvest.
• Control in fertility
Controlling the purity of the hybrid seeds (GMO seeds) ensures higher yields.
• Increase in food processing
Altered characteristics of GMO crops help ease food processing.
• Improvement of desirable characteristics
GMOs offer longer shelf life, enhanced color and taste, enhanced production or reduction of
enzymes, and other modified characteristics of plants, animals, and microorganisms.
• Nutritional and pharmaceutical enhancement
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Potential Risks and Downsides of GMOs
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Policies and Politics on GMOs
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 12
Just as human understanding of the natural world was revolutionized by the discovery of light
microscopes, modern microscopes that can expose and change individual atoms are once again exposing a
whole new world-the nano world. Scientific researchers have developed new technological tools that
greatly improved different aspects of our lives through the use of nanoscale.
What is nanotechnology?
Nanotechnology refers to the science,
engineering, and technology conducted at the nanoscale. It
is concerned with building 'things' -generally, materials
and devices on the scale of atoms and molecules. It
encompasses science and technology that manufactures
materials of great help to the improvement of various
areas of society especially health, environment, energy,
electronics, food, water, and agriculture.
The Nanoparticles
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Uses and Applications of Nanotechnologies
Because of their unique properties and structures, nanoparticles have a wide array of uses and
applications. They can be used in medicine, energy, environment, agriculture, food security,
communication, and other fields. These are some examples:
1. Nanosensors
2. Bionanocomposites
3. Magnetic nanoparticles
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Concerns and Issues about Nanotechnology
Activity:
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 13
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The Bioethics of Gene Therapy
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Science, Technology and Society
Module No. 13
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a United Nations body that evaluates and
monitors climate change science, released its report on global climate change.
The report's important conclusions were the following:
the world's climate has changed significantly over the past century;
the significant change has human influence;
using climate models and if the trend continues, the global mean surface temperature will increase
between 1°C and 3.5°C by 2100.
Climate is a measure of the average pattern of variation in temperature, humidity, atmospheric
pressure, wind, precipitation, atmospheric particle count and other meteorological variables in a given
region over long periods of time.
Climate change refers to the statistically significant changes in climate for continuous period of
time.
Natural Causes
1. Volcanic Eruptions
Volcanic eruptions are one of the natural causes of climate change. When volcanoes erupt, it emits
different natural aerosols like carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxides, salt crystals, volcanic ashes or dust, and
even microorganisms like bacteria and viruses.
Temporarily, volcanic aerosols can provide cooling effect to the atmosphere for 1 to 2 years
because it blocks solar radiation coming from the sun.
What happens in violent volcanic eruptions is the release of ash particles in the stratosphere. The
volcanic ashes which have sulfur dioxide combine with water vapor. It then forms to sulfuric acid and
sulfurous aerosols. The sulfurous aerosols then are transported by easterly or westerly winds.
2. Orbital Changes
Earth's orbit can also cause climate change. This was proposed by the Milankovitch theory. The
Milankovitch theory states that as the Earth travels through space around the Sun, cyclical variations in
three elements of Earth-Sun geometry combine to produce variations in the amount of solar energy that
reaches Earth (Academic Emporia, 2017).
The three elements that have cyclic variations are eccentricity, obliquity, and precession.
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Human Activities
- The largest known contribution comes from the burning of fossil fuels, which releases carbon
dioxide gas to the atmosphere;
- Human activities result in emissions of four principal greenhouse gases:
• Deforestation releases carbon dioxide and reduces its uptake by plants;
• High methane emission is related to agriculture, natural gas distribution, and landfills;
• High nitrous oxide is also emitted by human activities such as fertilizer use and fossil fuel
burning;
• Halocarbons released by human activities destroy ozone in the stratosphere and have caused the
ozone hole over Antarctica.
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Effects of Climate Change on Humans and Society
- It directly affects the basic elements of people’s lives like water, food, health, use of land, and the
environment.
- Declining crop yields due to drought, especially in Africa, are likely to leave hundreds of millions
without the ability to produce or purchase sufficient food.
- It will increase worldwide deaths from malnutrition and heat stress.
- Ecosystems will be particularly vulnerable to climate change.
- Ocean acidification will have major effects on marine ecosystems, with possible adverse
consequences on fish stocks.
- Melting or collapse of ice sheets would raise sea levels
- It will increase flood risks during the wet season and it will strongly reduce dry-season water
supplies.
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