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- <text id=92TT2617>
- <title>
- Nov. 23, 1992: Science's Big Shift
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Nov. 23, 1992 God and Women
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLICY, Page 34
- Science's Big Shift
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Researchers are used to doing what they please. But in the
- Clinton era, more government money will flow toward work that
- attacks society's problems.
- </p>
- <p>By DICK THOMPSON/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> Ever since Ben Franklin began experimenting with
- electricity, the strength of American science has been the
- freedom it gives bright people to follow their curiosity. Today
- federally supported science is an enterprise unique in
- government: it is largely directed from the bottom up, driven
- by the ideas of individual scientists. In exchange for this
- freedom from political meddling, scientists promise enormous
- social benefits, from increased prosperity to better public
- health.
- </p>
- <p> But while the U.S. government spent $27.6 billion on
- civilian research last year, the largest annual investment ever
- made by any country, there is a growing sense that something is
- wrong with the scientific bargain. AIDS remains incurable, and
- tuberculosis is returning. The economy is floundering as
- sophisticated consumer goods all seem to be stamped MADE IN
- JAPAN. The payback from the space shuttle seems tiny compared
- with the billions of dollars it burns up. Says Walter Massey,
- director of the National Science Foundation: "The public hears
- that we're No. 1 in science, and they want to know why that fact
- isn't making our lives better. The one thing that works in this
- country doesn't seem to be paying off."
- </p>
- <p> Now government is preparing to take a different stance
- toward science -- and not just because a new Administration is
- coming to Washington. Long before the election, policymakers
- were concluding that they should assert more control over
- research by telling many scientists precisely what to work on.
- "We've got to do some readjusting," says Guyford Stever,
- co-chairman of a recent Carnegie Commission study on the future
- of American science.
- </p>
- <p> At issue is the balance between two very different types
- of research: basic and applied. Basic scientists pursue
- knowledge for its own sake. They may study the sex lives of
- bacteria growing in Petri dishes or use giant accelerators to
- smash protons together to see what kinds of subatomic debris
- come out. Applied scientists, in contrast, have a social goal
- in mind. They take the knowledge gained from basic science and
- try to apply it to solving a problem or creating a new
- technology. They may use their understanding of light waves to
- construct an optical computer or test a drug to see if it will
- knock out the AIDS virus.
- </p>
- <p> Without basic science, there can be no applied science.
- But a consensus is building that the U.S. spends too much of
- its research budget on the search for new knowledge and not
- enough on harnessing the knowledge already gained. Now every
- major federal science agency, from the National Institutes of
- Health to NASA, is experimenting with or proposing some form of
- "directed research" to meet social needs. This is a historic
- shift for science -- one that portends more planning and
- accountability than in the past. For the first time, science
- will be driven more by its consumers than its products.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration will go along with, and even
- accelerate, this change in emphasis. The President-elect has
- repeatedly pledged to direct government support to such
- practical fields as fiber-optic communications, computer
- networking, biotechnology, robotics and magnetic-levitation
- train transportation. Vice President Gore will probably be in
- charge of coordinating federal efforts to spur technology.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists are not taking this assault on their
- independence lightly. Thousands of letters (more than 250 in one
- day) have poured into the National Science Foundation from
- researchers protesting the agency's intention to "redefine" its
- role and focus more on applied research. Howls have been even
- louder over the National Institutes of Health's new "strategic
- plan," which would, among other things, encourage scientists to
- work more closely with industry. To some observers, the
- reaction from the scientific community is little more than the
- pleadings of another special-interest group trying to preserve
- its privileges. "I thought NIH existed to meet the needs of the
- public," says agency director Dr. Bernadine Healy of the outcry
- over the new strategic plan. "They thought NIH was here to serve
- scientists."
- </p>
- <p> Researchers say America may be trading future knowledge
- for short-term political profit. The new approach, they fear,
- will dry up basic research, which has spawned entire segments
- of the national economy, including the biotech and computer
- industries. "What we're all worried about is that there will be
- less and less room to maneuver in basic research, the area that
- put us where we are," says Dr. Harold Varmus, a
- Nobel-prizewinning microbiologist from the University of
- California, San Francisco. "If we move our investment into some
- narrowly defined social contract, 10 years from now we will have
- nothing."
- </p>
- <p> In the best of worlds, the nation's basic science
- structure would be left untouched even as applied research was
- strengthened. But the money isn't there. When the Bush
- Administration earlier this year submitted a 1993 budget that
- would have increased science spending only 6.5%, to $28 billion,
- Congress for the first time in recent memory actually whittled
- down the Administration's request -- to a 2.3% increase. The
- budget freezes spending at many agencies, including NASA, and
- cuts NIH's funds (in inflation-adjusted dollars) 0.1%. Moreover,
- appropriations for some science agencies came attached with
- warnings that, in the future, simply requesting more money will
- no longer be considered a realistic solution to science's
- problems.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton hopes to ease the money crunch by transferring as
- much as $30 billion during the next four years from the
- Pentagon's research budget to civilian science and technology.
- But faced with an annual federal budget deficit of about $300
- billion, the new President cannot support basic research in the
- lavish, no-strings fashion that scientists have come to expect.
- Giant projects such as the superconducting supercollider, the
- proposed $8.25 billion Texas-based atom smasher that will hunt
- for quarks and other exotic subatomic particles, will come under
- increasingly tough scrutiny.
- </p>
- <p> The current controversy over science reopens an old
- debate. After World War II, proposals to establish a
- super-science agency were stalled for years as politicians and
- researchers fought for control. Scientists claimed that they
- alone could objectively and intelligently assess new research
- and chart future directions. But politicians were reluctant to
- hand out blank checks and then ask the recipients if the money
- was being wisely spent. As the debate wore on, scientists
- pointed to the postwar economic boom as a validation of their
- approach. The politicians finally capitulated, and the National
- Science Foundation -- funded by government but largely directed
- by the scientific establishment -- was created in 1950. In
- retrospect, it is now obvious that American economic dominance
- in the 1950s and '60s was virtually assured because competitors'
- production capacity had been destroyed by the war. The time has
- come, say critics of big science, to give the research system
- a thorough review and overhaul.
- </p>
- <p> Lacking a comprehensive strategy, U.S. science has grown
- in ways no one really planned. For example, more than 40% of
- the entire federal investment in basic research goes into
- biomedical studies. Is that too much? Is the investment
- improving health in a measurable way? Another question is what
- to do with the nation's three nuclear-weapons labs. They each
- consume $1 billion a year. Is that too much in this post-cold
- war era? Why have three weapons labs when no new bomb orders are
- on the books and Congress is halting underground tests? And most
- important, what should be done with expertise developed in these
- centers?
- </p>
- <p> Precisely how science will be redirected is unclear. Some
- have suggested the creation of a National Science Council
- within the White House that would have the same status as the
- National Security Council. Clinton's science advisers are
- studying the programs of the Department of Agriculture, which
- has had unparalleled success in enriching the farming industry
- through science and technology. The department, in cooperation
- with state governments, maintains agriculture extension offices
- across the country, enabling farmers to report promptly any
- problems they face. Solutions are then worked out in government
- research centers and applied back on the farm quickly enough to
- make a Japanese carmaker envious. That approach has eradicated
- such blights as boll weevil infestations, and it has made
- American farmers the most productive in the world.
- </p>
- <p> Forging a stronger alliance between science and industry
- will not be easy. One problem is that academic scientists often
- consider themselves the elite of the research establishment and
- do not always collaborate well with their less exalted
- colleagues engaged in commercial pursuits. The damage caused by
- the gulf between basic and applied researchers has become
- obvious to Dr. Leon Rosenberg, who last year left his post as
- dean of Yale medical school to become the president of
- Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute. With a
- foot in both worlds, Rosenberg notes, "These two communities
- have developed their biases and their myths in isolation, and
- that's not in the country's best interests, and it's surely not
- in the best interest of public health."
- </p>
- <p> Science should not be expected to work miracles, as
- overzealous researchers sometimes seem to promise. It can't
- build a leakproof nuclear umbrella, stop the evolution of new
- plagues or prop up an economy in the face of fiscal
- irresponsibility. But the consensus in Washington is that the
- full potential of American science is not being tapped. The job
- ahead for Clinton, the new Congress and scientific leaders is
- to determine how best to use limited research dollars to reveal
- new knowledge -- and put that knowledge to work solving
- society's problems.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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