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What's the use of basic science?

With public expenditure under pressure, the criteria for the allocation of funding to scientific research have come under increasing scrutiny. It is sometimes asserted that funds should be focused on applied (ÒusefulÓ) science and technology, rather than pure (ÒuselessÓ) science. I shall argue that...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Hubert
Lenguaje:eng
eng
Publicado: CERN 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/388110
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author Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Hubert
author_facet Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Hubert
author_sort Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Hubert
collection CERN
description With public expenditure under pressure, the criteria for the allocation of funding to scientific research have come under increasing scrutiny. It is sometimes asserted that funds should be focused on applied (ÒusefulÓ) science and technology, rather than pure (ÒuselessÓ) science. I shall argue that this misunderstands the contribution of science to society and the role of public funding. To equate the useful with the applied is to display the same level of understanding as the child who thinks that the hands are the most important part of a watch because they are the ones that tell the time. Governments should support basic science because it is economically useful, as well as being part of our culture. This leads to the much more difficult questions of the level at which Government should fund basic science, and criteria for the allocation of funding between different fields.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
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publisher CERN
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spelling cern-3881102022-11-02T22:17:01Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/388110engengLlewellyn Smith, Christopher HubertWhat's the use of basic science?Science in GeneralWith public expenditure under pressure, the criteria for the allocation of funding to scientific research have come under increasing scrutiny. It is sometimes asserted that funds should be focused on applied (ÒusefulÓ) science and technology, rather than pure (ÒuselessÓ) science. I shall argue that this misunderstands the contribution of science to society and the role of public funding. To equate the useful with the applied is to display the same level of understanding as the child who thinks that the hands are the most important part of a watch because they are the ones that tell the time. Governments should support basic science because it is economically useful, as well as being part of our culture. This leads to the much more difficult questions of the level at which Government should fund basic science, and criteria for the allocation of funding between different fields.A talk on the uses of science and its relationship with governmentsCERNoai:cds.cern.ch:3881101997
spellingShingle Science in General
Llewellyn Smith, Christopher Hubert
What's the use of basic science?
title What's the use of basic science?
title_full What's the use of basic science?
title_fullStr What's the use of basic science?
title_full_unstemmed What's the use of basic science?
title_short What's the use of basic science?
title_sort what's the use of basic science?
topic Science in General
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/388110
work_keys_str_mv AT llewellynsmithchristopherhubert whatstheuseofbasicscience