from SLATE:
Canada Sells Out Science

By Phil Plait

Posted Monday, May 13, 2013, at 11:11 AM

Over the past few years, the Canadian government has been lurching
into antiscience territory. For example, they’ve been muzzling
scientists, essentially censoring them from talking about their
research. Scientists have fought back against this, though from what I
hear with limited success.

But a new development makes the situation appear to be far worse. In a
stunning announcement, the National Research Council—the Canadian
scientific research and development agency—has now said that they will
only perform research that has “social or economic gain”.

This is not a joke. I wish it were.

John MacDougal, President of the NRC, literally said, “Scientific
discovery is not valuable unless it has commercial value”. Gary
Goodyear, the Canadian Minister of State for Science and Technology,
also stated “There is [sic] only two reasons why we do science and
technology. First is to create knowledge ... second is to use that
knowledge for social and economic benefit. Unfortunately, all too
often the knowledge gained is opportunity lost.”

I had to read the article two or three times to make sure I wasn’t
missing something, because I was thinking that no one could possibly
utter such colossally ignorant statements. But no, I was reading it
correctly. These two men—leaders in the Canadian scientific research
community—were saying, out loud and clearly, that the only science
worth doing is what lines the pocket of business.

This is monumentally backwards thinking. That is not the reason we do
science. Economic benefits are results of doing research, but should
not be the reason we do it. Basic scientific research is a vast
endeavor, and some of it will pay off economically, and some won’t. In
almost every case, you cannot know in advance which will do which.

In the 19th century, for example, James Clerk Maxwell was just
interested in understanding electricity and magnetism. He didn’t do it
for monetary benefit, to support a business, or to maximize a profit.
Yet his research led to the foundation of our entire economy today.
Computers, the Internet, communication, satellites, everything you
plug in or that uses a battery, stem from the work he did simply
because of his own curiosity. I strongly suspect that if he were to
apply to the NRC for funding under this new regime, he’d be turned
down flat. The kind of work Maxwell did then is very difficult to do
without support these days, and we need governments to provide that
help.

In his statement above, Goodyear did throw in a mention of “social
benefit”, and I’ll agree that does motivate many scientists—making
life better for people is a strong incentive—but again, you cannot
always know what research will do that and what won’t.

And that’s OK, because it’s not like the money is wasted when invested
in science. For one thing, the amount of money we’re talking about
here is tiny, tiny, compared to a national budget. For another,
investment in science always pays off. Always, and at a very high
rate. If you want to boost your economy in the middle and long run,
one of the best ways to do it is invest in science.  Instead of
slicing away the scope of what scientists can do to save pennies and
focus on narrower goals, the government should be increasing their
budget and widening their vision.

But the Canadian government is doing the precise opposite. If proposed
and immediate economic benefits are the prime factors in choosing what
science to fund, then the freedom of this human endeavor will be
critically curtailed. It’s draining the passion and heart out of one
of the best things we humans do.

By doing this, the Canadian government and the NRC have literally sold
out science.

[Perhaps funding basic science should be seen as promoting an
evolutionary process. Scientists produce all sorts of ideas, but the
Darwinian process of experimentation, peer review, etc. selects those
ideas that actually have the potential to improve our knowledge of the
universe and/or human welfare. Canadian and U.S. Philistines (to use a
word that's really unfair to the real Philistines, but you know what I
mean) want to select which parts of the evolutionary process to
emphasize _ahead of time_, i.e., those that promote the business
bottom line (or rather, the bottom lines of businesses that are
politically influential), i.e., before any experimentation or peer
review. But the ones that are good for profits are precisely the ones
that businesses can and often do finance themselves. And this emphasis
stunts the development of any science with "public goods"
characteristics (i.e., benefit humanity but not the profits of
individual businesses). Of course, the "selection ahead of time"
process deliberately prevents any research that goes against the power
of vested interests, e.g., research that suggests that global warming
is (a) happening; (b) due to human actions; and/or (c) a bad thing. It
also can prevent research that admits that the Earth is more than a
few thousand years old, wasn't created by God, etc. ]
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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