Eisenhower Warned Us About the ‘Scientific Elite’
In President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s famous 1961 speech about the dangers of the military-industrial complex, he also cautioned Americans about the growing power of a “scientific, technological elite.”
“The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by federal employment project allocations and the power of money is ever present,” warned Eisenhower.
The federal government had become a major financier of scientific research after World War II, and Eisenhower was worried that the spirit of open inquiry and progress would be corrupted by the priorities of the federal bureaucracy.
And he was right.
Today, many of the people protesting the Trump administration’s cuts to federal funding for scientific research are part of that scientific, technological elite.
But there’s a good chance that slashing federal spending will liberate science from the corrupting forces that Eisenhower warned us about.
“If you look at, particularly, 19th century Britain when science was absolutely in the private sector, we have some of the best science,” says Terence Kealey, a professor of clinical biochemistry at the University of Buckingham and a critic of government science funding. “It comes from the wealth of the rich. Charles Darwin was a rich person. Even [scientists] who had no money had access to rich men’s money one way or another. The rich paid for science.”
Kealey points out that Britain’s gross domestic product (GDP) per capita outpaced that of 19th-century France and Germany—both of which generously subsidized scientific research—indicating that the return on state subsidies in the form of economic growth was low. As America emerged as a superpower, its GDP per capita surpassed Britain’s.
“So the Industrial Revolution was British, and the second Industrial Revolution, was American, and both were in the absence of the government funding of science,” says Kealey.
Thomas Edison’s industrial lab produced huge breakthroughs in telecommunications and electrification. Alexander Graham Bell’s lab produced modern telephony and sound recording, all without government money. The Wright Brothers—who ran a bicycle shop before revolutionizing aviation—launched the first successfully manned airplane flight in December 1903, beating out more experienced competitors like Samuel Langley, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, who had received a grant from the War Department for his research.
The notion that the government needs to accelerate scientific progress was based on America’s experience during World War II, when federally funded research led to breakthroughs in rocketry, medicine, and radar. The Manhattan Project, which cost $27 billion in today’s dollars, employed more than half a million people and culminated in the creation of the atomic bomb and the discovery of nuclear fission.
“Lobbyists took the Manhattan Project and said, ‘Look what government funding of science can do,’ and they then twisted it,” says Kealey. He acknowledges that the government can accomplish discrete, “mission-based” scientific projects—like racing toward a bomb—but he argues that this is very different from the generalized state funding of “basic research” that followed.Â
In November 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent a letter to Vannevar Bush, director of the U.S. Office of Science and Development during the war. Roosevelt instructed Bush to come up with a plan to make federal funding of scientific research permanent.Â
“It has been basic United States policy that government should foster the opening of new frontiers,” wrote Bush in calling for the nationalization of basic science research. “It opened the seas to clipper ships and furnished land for pioneers.”
Bush’s treatise eventually led to the creation of the National Science Foundation in 1950.
But it was a stunning accomplishment from America
Article from Reason.com
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