The continuing need for disinterested research.

Journal: Science And Engineering Ethics
Published:
Abstract

For scientific knowledge to be trustworthy, it needs to be dissociated from material interests. Disinterested research also performs other important noninstrumental roles. In particular, academic science has traditionally provided society with reliable, imaginative public knowledge and independent, self-critical expertise. But this type of science is not compatible with the practice of instrumental research, which is typically proprietary, prosaic, pragmatic and partisan. With ever-increasing dependence on commercial or state funding, all modes of knowledge production are merging into a new, 'post-academic' research culture which is dominated by utilitarian goals. Growing concern about conflicts of interest is thus a symptom of deep-seated malaise in science and medicine.

Authors
John Ziman