perm filename WEISSK.LET[ESS,JMC] blob
sn#005559 filedate 1972-04-30 generic text, type T, neo UTF8
00100 Victor Weisskopf's (14 April, p. 138) view of the relation of
00200 science to society is more convenient than scientific. It amalgamates
00300 those arguments which have served best to persuade politicians to expand
00400 the support of basic science, and it papers over issues that have shown
00500 a tendency to provoke conflict in the academic or other intellectual
00600 constituencies. The following virtues have endeared this view to most
00700 senior basic scientists:
00800
00900 1. The government gets to support science on an increasing scale
01000 without having to concern itself with the relative merits of different
01100 scientific enterprises. The committees divide the money in a gentlemanly
01200 way according to seniority, scientific esthetics, and entrepreneurial
01300 skill.
01400
01500 2. Recognizing the existence of a social crisis brought on by
01600 technology in some unspecified way hopefully blunts the attack of
01700 eco-freaks and political radicals.
01800
01900 3. The need for people trained in basic sciences to solve these
02000 problems protects the educational part of the scientific establishment.
02100
02200 4. Recognizing the limits of science in dealing with human
02300 emotions mollifies the "humanists".
02400 (Tasteful biblical quotations increase the humanistic depth of the
02500 article.)
02600
02700 5. Recognizing the limits of science in dealing with political
02800 and social questions avoids conflict with politicians.
02900
03000 6. Since no-one can know how a piece of basic research will
03100 eventually benefit humanity, no-one is under any moral obligation to
03200 go out of his way to achieve any specific benefit in his research work.
03300
03400 The fact that Weisskopf's views are convenient does not make them
03500 wrong, but I have the following specific criticisms:
03600
03700 1. Weisskopf is quite right in his qualitative defense of basic
03800 science as having contributed to human welfare. Unfortunately, he
03900 contributes nothing to the present quantitative argument about whether
04000 basic science should be supported enough so that everyone who wants
04100 to make a career in it and is qualified by present standards to do so
04200 should receive support.
04300
04400 2. Technology also needs its share of geniuses. Human welfare
04500 would advance much more rapidly if half the people at the highest levels
04600 of ability now devoting themselves to basic science, would devote their
04700 efforts to recognizing technological needs of society and fulfilling
04800 them. This, rather than money, is the main cost of the present academic
04900 climate of opinion that regards pure science has higher than applied.
05000