Good article Billy.  I like the emphasis on truth-seeking and finding what the 
data reveals, regardless of incoming hypotheses.

 

Chris 

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, February 16, 2016 8:38 AM
To: [email protected]
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Subject: [RC] What values are important to scientists?

 

( Michigan State University )

 MSU TODAY

 

 

 

Science & Technology 

 

Published: Feb. 14, 2016 


What values are important to scientists?


Contact(s): Layne Cameron Media Communications office: (517) 353-8819 cell: 
(765) 748-4827 [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> , 
Robert Pennock Lyman Briggs College office: (517) 432-7701 [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>  

While many people are marking today scrutinizing the virtues of their 
Valentines, Michigan State University revealed a first-of-its-kind study on the 
virtues and values of scientists.

The study, presented at the meeting of the American Association for the 
Advancement of Science in Washington, D.C., surveyed nearly 500 astronomers, 
biologists, chemists, physicists and earth scientists to identify the core 
traits of exemplary scientists.

The subjects selected were scientists who had been honored by their respective 
national organization or society, and the results show that above all, these 
researchers hold honesty and curiosity in the highest regard, said Robert 
Pennock, a professor in MSU’s Lyman Briggs College and leader of the study.

“If you’re not curious, you’re probably not a real scientist,” he said. “The 
goal that you have is to find out something true about the world, regardless of 
what your preferred hypothesis might be. Your real drive is to find what is 
revealed by the data. This is absolutely essential in being a scientist.”

If someone is dishonest and going to the extreme of faking data, that person is 
not really a scientist in the true sense, Pennock added.

Those surveyed, using a scale from zero to ten, were asked to rate 
attentiveness, collaborative, courage, curiosity, honesty, humility to 
evidence, meticulousness, objectivity, perseverance and skepticism with regard 
to their importance for scientific research.

Once they scored each trait, the scientists were asked how each characteristic 
is or isn’t expressed in science. The subjects also were asked to identify the 
three most-important virtues.

The study revealed a tacit moral code in scientific culture – one that most 
researchers hope to be able to pass on to their students, Pennock said.

“The results will have some implications for teaching science,” said Pennock, 
who conducted the study with Jon Miller of the University of Michigan. “Our 
teaching shouldn’t stop with the content or science processes. Cultivating the 
values – like honesty and curiosity – that underlie science should be a part of 
science education.”

Underscoring the importance of instilling desirable traits in the next 
generation of scientists, the study tackled how exemplary scientists preserve 
and transmit these values to their students.

A whopping 94 percent of scientists believe scientific values and virtues can 
be learned. The number dropped a bit, though, when asked if these traits are 
actually being transmitted to current graduate students.

“It’s encouraging that 4 out of 5 scientists believe that their values are 
being embraced by the next generation of students,” Pennock said. “However, 
it’s somewhat troubling that 22 percent of the scientists surveyed see these 
valued traits eroding a bit.”

With stories of falsified results making headlines, it’s known that some 
scientists not only fail to achieve these ideals but directly violate them.

Science is a truth-seeking enterprise. Based on this study, researchers 
violating this unwritten code of conduct may not be scientists in the truest 
sense, Pennock said.

“Researchers who commit such misconduct are not merely violating some 
regulatory requirements, but they also are violating – in a deep way – what it 
means to be a scientist,” he said.

This research was funded by the John Templeton Foundation and the National 
Science Foundation

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