公 法 评 论 惟愿公平如大水滚滚,使公义如江河滔滔! |
The Republic of Science: Its Political and Economic Theory
Michael Polanyi
[This article originally appeared in Minerva 1:54-74, 1962 and is put on WWW
with kind permission from Kluwer Academic Publishers (http://www.wkap.nl)
and John C. Polanyi.]
My title is intended to suggest that the community of scientists is organized
in a way which resembles certain features of a body politic and works according
to economic principles similar to those by which the production of material
goods is regulated. Much of what I will have to say will be common knowledge
among scientists, but I believe that it will recast the subject from a novel
point of view which can both profit from and have a lesson for political and
economic theory. For in the free cooperation of independent scientists we
shall find a highly simplified model of a free society, which presents in
isolation certain basic features of it that are more difficult to identify
within the comprehensive functions of a national body.
The first thing to make clear is that scientists, freely making their own
choice of problems and pursuing them in the light of their own personal judgment,
are in fact co-operating as members of a closely knit organization. The point
can be settled by considering the opposite case where individuals are engaged
in a joint task without being in any way co-ordinated. A group of women shelling
peas work at the same task, but their individual efforts are not co-ordinated.
The same is true of a team of chess players. This is shown by the fact that
the total amount of peas shelled and the total number of games won will not
be affected if the members of the group are isolated from each other. Consider
by contrast the effect which a complete isolation of scientists would have
on the progress of science. Each scientist would go on for a while developing
problems derived from the information initially available to all. But these
problems would soon be exhausted, and in the absence of further information
about the results achieved by others, new problems of any value would cease
to arise, and scientific progress would come to a standstill.
This shows that the activities of scientists are in fact coordinated, and
it also reveals the principle of their co-ordination. This consists in the
adjustment of the efforts of each to the hitherto achieved results of the
others. We may call this a coordination by mutual adjustment of independent
initiatives--of initiatives which are co-ordinated because each takes into
account all the other initiatives operating within the same system.
*
When put in these abstract terms the principle of spontaneous coordination
of independent initiatives may sound obscure. So let me illustrate it by a
simple example. Imagine that we are given the pieces of a very large jigsaw
puzzle, and suppose that for some reason it is important that our giant puzzle
be put together in the shortest possible time. We would naturally try to speed
this up by engaging a number of helpers; the question is in what manner these
could be best employed. Suppose we share out the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle
equally among the helpers and let each of them work on his lot separately.
It is easy to see that this method, which would be quite appropriate to a
number of women shelling peas, would be totally ineffectual in this case,
since few of the pieces allocated to one particular assistant would be found
to fit together. We could do a little better by providing duplicates of all
the pieces to each helper separately, and eventually somehow bring together
their several results. But even by this method the team would not much surpass
the performance of a single individual at his best. The only way the assistants
can effectively co-operate, and surpass by far what any single one of them
could do, is to 1et them work on putting the puzzle together in sight of the
others so that every time a piece of it is fitted in by one helper, all the
others will immediately watch out for the next step that becomes possible
in consequence. Under this system, each helper will act on his own initiative,
by responding to the latest achievements the others, and the completion of
their joint task will be great accelerated. We have here in a nutshell the
way in which a series of independent initiatives are organized to a joint
achievement by mutually adjusting themselves at every successive stage to
the situation created by all the others who are acting likewise.
Such self-co-ordination of independent initiatives leads to a joint result
which is unpremeditated by any of those who bring it about. Their co-ordination
is guided as by 'an invisible hand' towards the joint discovery of a hidden
system of things. Since its end-result is unknown, this kind of co-operation
can only advance stepwise, and the total performance will be the best possible
if each consecutive step is decided upon by the person most competent to do
so. We may imagine this condition to be fulfilled for the fitting together
of a jigsaw puzzle if each helper watches out for any new opportunities arising
along a particular section of the hitherto completed patch of the puzzle,
and also keeps an eye on a particular lot of pieces, so as to fit them in
wherever a chance presents itself. The effectiveness of a group of helpers
will then exceed that of any isolated member, to the extent to which some
member of the group will always discover a new chance for adding a piece to
the puzzle more quickly than any one isolated person could have done by himself.
Any attempt to organize the group of helpers under a single authority would
eliminate their independent initiatives and thus reduce their joint effectiveness
to that of the single person directing them from the centre. It would, in
effect, paralyse their cooperation.
Essentially the same is true for the advancement of science by independent
initiatives adjusting themselves consecutively to the results achieved by
all the others. So long as each scientist keeps making the best contribution
of which he is capable, and on which no one could improve (except by abandoning
the problem of his own choice and thus causing an overall loss to the advancement
of science), we may affirm that the pursuit of science by independent self-co-ordinated
initiatives assures the most efficient possible organization of scientific
progress. And we may add, again, that any authority which would undertake
to direct the work of the scientist centrally would bring the progress of
science virtually to a standstill.
*
What I have said here about the highest possible co-ordination of individual
scientific efforts by a process of self-co-ordination may recall the self-co-ordination
achieved by producers and consumers operating in a market. It was, indeed,
with this in mind that I spoke of 'the invisible hand' guiding the co-ordination
of independent initiatives to a maximum advancement of science, just as Adam
Smith invoked 'the invisible hand' to describe the achievement of greatest
joint material satisfaction when independent producers and consumers are guided
by the prices of goods in a market. I am suggesting, in fact, that the co-ordinating
functions of the market are but a special case of co-ordination by mutual
adjustment. In the case of science, adjustment takes place by taking note
of the published results of other scientists; while in the case of the market,
mutual adjustment is mediated by a system of prices broadcasting current exchange
relations, which make supply meet demand.
But the system of prices ruling the market not only transmits information
in the light of which economic agents can mutually adjust their actions, it
also provides them with an incentive to exercise economy in terms of money.
We shall see that, by contrast, the scientist responding directly to the intellectual
situation created by the published results of other scientists is motivated
by current professional standards.
Yet in a wider sense of the term, the decisions of a scientist choosing a
problem and pursuing it to the exclusion of other possible avenues of inquiry
may be said to have an economic character. For his decisions are designed
to produce the highest possible result by the use of a limited stock of intellectual
and material resources. The scientist fulfils this purpose by choosing a problem
that is neither too hard nor too easy for him. For to apply himself to a problem
that does not tax his faculties to the full is to waste some of his faculties;
while to attack a problem that is too hard for him would waste his faculties
altogether. The psychologist K. Lewin has observed that one's person never
becomes fully involved either in a problem that is much too hard, nor in one
that is much too easy. The line the scientist must choose turns out, therefore,
to be that of greatest ego-involvement; it is the line of greatest excitement,
sustaining the most intense attention and effort of thought. The choice will
be conditioned to some extent by the resources available to the scientist
in terms of materials and assistants, but he will be ill-advised to choose
his, problem with a view to guaranteeing that none of these resource be wasted.
He should not hesitate to incur such a loss, if it leads him to deeper and
more important problems.
*
This is where professional standards enter into the scientist's motivation.
He assesses the depth of a problem and the importance of its prospective solution
primarily by the standards of scientific merit accepted by the scientific
community--though his own work may demand these standards to be modified.
Scientific merit depends on a number of criteria which I shall enumerate here
under three headings. These criteria are not altogether independent of each
other, but I cannot analyse here their mutual relationship.
(1) The first criterion that a contribution to science must fulfil in order
to be accepted is a sufficient degree of plausibility. Scientific publications
are continuously beset by cranks, frauds and bunglers whose contributions
must be rejected if journals are not to be swamped by them. This censorship
will not only eliminate obvious absurdities but must often refuse publication
merely because the conclusions of a paper appear to be unsound in the light
of current scientific knowledge. It is indeed difficult even to start an experimental
inquiry if its problem is considered scientifically unsound. Few laboratories
would accept today a student of extrasensory perception, and even a project
for testing once more the hereditary transmission of acquired characters would
be severely discouraged from the start. Besides, even when all these obstacles
have been overcome, and a paper has come out signed by an author of high distinction
in science, it may be totally disregarded, simply for the reason that its
results conflict sharply with the current scientific opinion about the nature
of things.
I shall illustrate this by an example which I have used elsewhere.[1] A series
of simple experiments were published in June 1947 in the Proceedings of the
Royal Society by Lord Rayleigh--a distinguished Fellow of the Society--purporting
to show that hydrogen atoms striking a metal wire transmit to it energies
up to a hundred electron volts. This, if true, would have been far more revolutionary
than the discovery of atomic fission by Otto Hahn. Yet, when I asked physicists
what they thought about it, they only shrugged their shoulders. They could
not find fault with the experiment yet not one believed in its results, nor
thought it worth while to repeat it. They just ignored it. A possible explanation
of Lord Rayleigh's experiments is given in my Personal Knowledge.[2] It appears
that the physicists missed nothing by disregarding these findings.
(2) The second criterion by which the merit of a contribution is assessed
may be described as its scientific value, a value that is composed of the
following three coefficients: (a) its accuracy (b) its systematic importance,
(c) the intrinsic interest of its subject-matter. You can see these three
gradings entering jointly into the value of a paper in physics compared with
one in biology. The inanimate things studied by physics are much less interesting
than the living beings which are the subject of biology. But physics makes
up by its great accuracy and wide theoretical scope for the dullness of its
subject, while biology compensates for its lack or accuracy and theoretical
beauty by its exciting matter.
(3) A contribution of sufficient plausibility and of a given scientific value
may yet vary in respect of its originality; this is the third criterion of
scientific merit. The originality of technical inventions is assessed, for
the purpose of claiming a patent, in terms of the degree of surprise which
the invention would cause among those familiar with the art. Similarly, the
originality of a discovery is assessed by the degree of surprise which its
communication should arouse among scientists. The unexpectedness of a discovery
will overlap with its systematic importance, yet the surprise caused by a
discovery, which causes us to admire its daring and ingenuity, is something
different from this. It pertains to the act of producing the discovery. There
are discoveries of the highest daring and ingenuity, as for example the discovery
of Neptune, which have no great systematic importance.
*
Both the criteria of plausibility and of scientific value tend to enforce
conformity, while the value attached to originality encourages dissent. This
internal tension is essential in guiding and motivating scientific work. The
professional standards of science must impose a framework of discipline and
at the same time encourage rebellion against it. They must demand that, in
order to be taken seriously, an investigation should largely conform to the
currently predominant beliefs about the nature of things, while allowing that
in order to be original it may to some extent go against these. Thus, the
authority of scientific opinion enforces the teachings of science in general,
for the very purpose of fostering their subversion in particular points.
This dual function of professional standards in science is but the logical
outcome of the belief that scientific truth is an aspect of reality and that
the orthodoxy of science is taught as a guide that should enable the novice
eventually to make his own contacts with this reality. The authority of scientific
standards is thus exercised for the very purpose of providing those guided
by it with independent grounds for opposing it. The capacity to renew itself
by evoking and assimilating opposition to itself appears to be logically inherent
in the sources of the authority wielded by scientific orthodoxy.
But who is it, exactly, who exercises the authority of this orthodoxy? I have
mentioned scientific opinion as its agent. But this raises a serious problem.
No single scientist has a sound understanding of more than a tiny fraction
of the total domain of science. How can an aggregate of such specialists possibly
form a joint opinion? How can they possibly exercise jointly the delicate
function of imposing a current scientific view about the nature of things,
and the current scientific valuation of proposed contributions, even while
encouraging an originality which would modify this orthodoxy? In seeking the
answer to this question we shall discover yet another organizational principle
that is essential for the control of a multitude of independent scientific
initiatives. This principle is based on the fact that, while scientists can
admittedly exercise competent judgment only over a small part of science,
they can usually judge an area adjoining their own special studies that is
broad enough to include some fields on which other scientists have specialized.
We thus have a considerable degree of overlapping between the areas over which
a scientist can exercise a sound critical judgment. And, of course, each scientist
who is a member of a group of overlapping competences will also be a member
of other groups of the same kind, so that the whole of science will be covered
by chains and networks of overlapping neighbourhoods. Each link in these chains
and networks will establish agreement between the valuations made by scientists
overlooking the same overlapping fields, and so, from one overlapping neighbourhood
to the other, agreement will be established on the valuation of scientific
merit throughout all the domains of science. Indeed, through these overlapping
neighbourhoods uniform standards of scientific merit will prevail over the
entire range of science, all the way from astronomy to medicine. This network
is the seat of scientific opinion. Scientific opinion is an opinion not held
by any single human mind, but one which, split into thousands of fragments,
is held by a multitude of individuals, each of whom endorses the others' opinion
at second hand, by relying on the consensual chains which link him to all
the others through a sequence of overlapping neighbourhoods.
*
Admittedly, scientific authority is not distributed evenly throughout the
body of scientists; some distinguished members of the profession predominate
over others of a more junior standing. But the authority of scientific opinion
remains essentially mutual; it is established between scientists, not above
them. Scientists exercise their authority over each other. Admittedly, the
body of scientists, as a whole, does uphold the authority of science over
the lay public. It controls thereby also the process by which young men are
trained to become members of the scientific profession. But once the novice
has reached the grade of an independent scientist, there is no longer any
superior above him. His submission to scientific opinion is entailed now in
his joining a chain of mutual appreciations, within which he is called upon
to bear his equal share of responsibility for the authority to which he submits.
Let me make it clear, even without going into detail, how great and varied
are the powers exercised by this authority. Appointments to positions in universities
and elsewhere, which offer opportunity for independent research, are filled
in accordance with the appreciation of candidates by scientific opinion. Referees
reporting on papers submitted to journals are charged with keeping out contributions
which current scientific opinion condemns as unsound, and scientific opinion
is in control, once more, over the issue of textbooks, as it can make or mar
their influence through reviews in scientific journals. Representatives of
scientific opinion will pounce upon newspaper articles or other popular literature
which would venture to spread views contrary to scientific opinion. The teaching
of science in schools is controlled likewise. And, indeed, the whole outlook
of man on the universe is conditioned by an implicit recognition of the authority
of scientific opinion.
I have mentioned earlier that the uniformity of scientific standards throughout
science makes possible the comparison between the value of discoveries in
fields as different as astronomy and medicine. This possibility is of great
value for the rational distribution of efforts and material resources throughout
the various branches of science. If the minimum merit by which a contribution
would be qualified for acceptance by journals were much lower in one branch
of science than in another, this would clearly cause too much effort to be
spent on the former branch as compared with the latter. Such is in fact the
principle which underlies the rational distribution of grants for the pursuit
of research. Subsidies should be curtailed in areas where their yields in
terms of scientific merit tend to be low, and should be channelled instead
to the growing points of science, where increased financial means may be expected
to produce a work of higher scientific value. It does not matter for this
purpose whether the money comes from a public authority or from private sources,
nor whether it is disbursed by a few sources or a large number of benefactors.
So long as each allocation follows the guidance of scientific opinion, by
giving preference to the most promising scientists and subjects, the distribution
of grants will automatically yield the maximum advantage for the advancement
of science as a whole. It will do so, at any rate, to the extent to which
scientific opinion offers the best possible appreciation of scientific merit
and of the prospects for the further development of scientific talent.
For scientific opinion may, of course, sometimes be mistaken, and as a result
unorthodox work of high originality and merit may be discouraged or altogether
suppressed for a time. But these risks have to be taken. Only the discipline
imposed by an effective scientific opinion can prevent the adulteration of
science by cranks and dabblers. In parts of the world where no sound and authoritative
scientific opinion is established, research stagnates for lack of stimulus,
while unsound reputations grow up based on commonplace achievements or mere
empty boasts. Politics and business play havoc with appointments and the granting
of subsidies for research; journals are made unreadable by including much
trash.
Moreover, only a strong and united scientific opinion imposing the intrinsic
value of scientific progress on society at large can elicit the support of
scientific inquiry by the general public. Only by securing popular respect
for its own authority can scientific opinion safeguard the complete independence
of mature scientists and the unhindered publicity of their results, which
jointly assure the spontaneous co-ordination of scientific efforts throughout
the world. These are the principles of organization under which the unprecedented
advancement of science has been achieved in the twentieth century. Though
it is easy to find flaws in their operation, they yet remain the only principles
by which this vast domain of collective creativity can be effectively promoted
and co-ordinated.
*
During the last twenty to thirty years, there have been many suggestions
and pressures towards guiding the progress of scientific inquiry in the direction
of public welfare. I shall speak mainly of those I have witnessed in England.
In August 1938, the British Association for the Advancement of Science founded
a new division for the social and international relations of science, which
was largely motivated by the desire to offer deliberate social guidance to
the progress of science. This programme was given more extreme expression
by the Association of Scientific Workers in Britain. In January 1943, the
Association filled a large hall in London with a meeting attended by many
of the most distinguished scientists of the country, and it decided--in the
words officially summing up the conference--that research would no longer
be conducted for itself as an end in itself. Reports from Soviet Russia describing
the successful conduct of scientific research according to plans laid down
by the Academy of Science with a view to supporting the economic Five-Year
Plans encouraged this resolution.
I appreciate the generous sentiments which actuate the aspiration of guiding
the progress of science into socially beneficent channels, but I hold its
aim to be impossible and indeed nonsensical.
An example will show what I mean by this impossibility. In January 1945, Lord
Russell and I were together on the BBC Brains Trust. We were asked about the
possible technical uses of Einstein's theory of relativity, and neither of
us could think of any. This was forty-years after the publication of the theory
and fifty years after the inception by Einstein of the work which led to its
discovery. It was fifty-eight years after the MichelsonMorley experiment.
But, actually, the technical application of relativity, which neither Russell
nor I could think of, was to be revealed within a few months by the explosion
of the first atomic bomb. For the energy of the explosion was released at
the expense of mass in accordance with the relativistic equation e = mc2 an
equation which was soon to be found splashed over the cover of Time magazine,
as a token of its supreme practical importance.
Perhaps Russell and I should have done better in foreseeing these applications
of relativity in January 1945, but it is obvious that Einstein could not possibly
take these future consequences into account when he started on the problem
which led to the discovery of relativity at the turn of the century. For one
thing, another dozen or more major discoveries had yet to be made before relativity
could be combined with them to yield the technical process which opened the
atomic age.
Any attempt at guiding scientific research towards a purpose other than its
own is an attempt to deflect it from the advancement of science. Emergencies
may arise in which all scientists willingly apply their gifts to tasks of
public interest. It is conceivable that we may come to abhor the progress
of science and stop all scientific research, or at least whole branches of
it, as the Soviets stopped research in genetics for twenty-five years. You
can kill or mutilate the advance of science, you cannot shape it. For it can
advance only by essentially unpredictable steps, pursuing problems of its
own, and the practical benefits of these advances will be incidental and hence
doubly unpredictable.
In saying this, I have not forgotten, but merely set aside, the vast amount
of scientific work currently conducted in industrial and governmental laboratories.[3]
In describing here the autonomous growth of science, I have taken the relation
of science to technology fully into account.
*
But even those who accept the autonomy of scientific progress may feel irked
by allowing such an important process to go on without trying to control the
co-ordination of its fragmentary initiatives. The period of high aspirations
following the last war produced an event to illustrate the impracticability
of this more limited task.
The incident originated in the University Grants Committee, which sent a memorandum
to the Royal Society in the summer of 1945. The document, signed by Sir Charles
Darwin, requested the aid of the Royal Society to secure 'The Balanced Development
of Science in the United Kingdom'; this was its title.
The proposal excluded undergraduate studies and aimed at the higher subjects
that are taught through the pursuit of research. Its main concern was with
the lack of co-ordination between universities in taking up 'rare' subjects,
'which call for expert study at only a few places, or in some cases perhaps
only one'. This was linked with the apprehension that appointments are filled
according to the dictates of fashion, as a result of which some subjects of
greater importance are being pursued with less vigour than others of lesser
importance. It proposed that a co-ordinating machinery should be set up for
levelling out these gaps and redundancies. The Royal Society was asked to
compile, through its Sectional Committees covering the main divisions of science,
lists of subjects deserving preference in order to fill gaps. Such surveys
were to be renewed in the future to guide the University Grants Committee
in maintaining balanced proportions of scientific effort throughout all fields
of inquiry.
Sir Charles Darwin's proposal was circulated by the Secretaries of the Royal
Society and the members of the Sectional Committees along with a report of
previous discussions of proposals by the Council and other groups of Fellows.
The report acknowledged that the co-ordination of the pursuit of higher studies
in the universities was defective ('haphazard') and endorsed the project for
periodic, most likely annual, surveys of gaps and redundancies by the Royal
Society. The members of the Sectional Committees were asked to prepare, for
consideration by a forthcoming meeting of the Council, lists of subjects suffering
from neglect.
Faced with this request, which I considered at the best pointless, I wrote
to the Physical Secretary (the late Sir Alfred Egerton) to express my doubts.
I argued that the present practice of filling vacant chairs by the most eminent
candidate that the university can attract was the best safeguard for rational
distribution of efforts over rival lines of scientific research. As an example
(which should appeal to Sir Charles Darwin as a physicist) I recalled the
successive appointments to the chair of physics in Manchester during the past
thirty years. Manchester had elected to this chair Schuster, Rutherford, W.
L. Bragg and Blackett, in this sequence, each of whom represented at the time
a 'rare' section of physics: spectroscopy, radioactivity, X-ray crystallography,
and cosmicrays, respectively. I affirmed that Manchester had acted rightly
and that they would have been ill-advised to pay attention to the claims of
subjects which had not produced at the time men of comparable ability. For
the principal criterion for offering increased opportunities to a new subject
was the rise of a growing number of distinguished scientists in that subject
and the falling off of creative initiative in other subjects, indicating that
resources should be withdrawn from them. While admitting that on certain occasions
it may be necessary to depart from this policy, I urged that it should be
recognized as the essential agency for maintaining a balanced development
of scientific research.
Sir Alfred Egerton's response was sympathetic, and, through him, my views
were brought to the notice of the members of Sectional Committees. Yet the
Committees met, and I duly took part in compiling a list of 'neglected subjects'
in chemistry. The result, however, appeared so vague and trivial (as I will
illustrate by an example in a moment) that I wrote to the Chairman of the
Chemistry Committee that I would not support the Committee's recommendations
if they should be submitted to the Senate of my university.
However, my worries were to prove unnecessary. Already the view was spreading
among the Chairmen of the Sectional Committees 'that a satisfactory condition
in each science would come about naturally, provided that each university
always chose the most distinguished leaders for its post, irrespective of
his specialization'. While others still expressed the fear that this would
make for an excessive pursuit of fashionable subjects, the upshot was, at
the best, inconclusive. Darwin himself had, in fact, already declared the
reports of the Sectional Committees 'rather disappointing'.
The whole action was brought to a close, one year after it had started, with
a circular letter to the Vice-Chancellors of the British universities signed
by Sir Alfred Egerton, as secretary, on behalf of the Council of the Royal
Society, a copy being sent to the University Grants Committee. The circular
included copies of the reports received from the Sectional Committees and
endorsed these in general. But in the body of the letter only a small number
of these recommendations were specified as being of special importance. This
list contained seven recommendations for the establishment of new schools
of research, but said nothing about the way these new schools should be co-ordinated
with existing activities all over the United Kingdom. The impact of this document
on the universities seems to have been negligible. The Chemistry Committee's
recommendation for the establishment of 'a strong school of analytic chemistry',
which should have concerned me as Professor of Physical Chemistry, was never
even brought to my notice in Manchester.
*
I have not recorded this incident in order to expose its error. It is an
important historical event. Most major principles of physics are founded on
the recognition of an impossibility, and no body of scientists was better
qualified than the Royal Society to demonstrate that a central authority cannot
effectively improve on the spontaneous emergence of growing points in science.
It has proved that little more can, or need, be done towards the advancement
of science than to assist spontaneous movements towards new fields of distinguished
discovery, at the expense of fields that have become exhausted. Though special
considerations may deviate from it, this procedure must be acknowledged as
the major principle for maintaining a balanced development of scientific research.
[4]
Let me recall yet another striking incident of the post-war period which bears
on these principles. I have said that the distribution of subsidies to pure
science should not depend on the sources of money, whether they are public
or private. This will hold to a considerable extent also for subsidies given
to universities as a whole. But after the war, when in England the cost of
expanding universities was largely taken over by the state, it was felt that
this must be repaid by a more direct support for the national interest. This
thought was expressed in July 1946 by the Committee of Vice-Chancellors in
a memorandum sent out to all universities, which Sir Ernest Simon (as he then
was), as Chairman of the Council of Manchester University, declared to be
of 'almost revolutionary' importance. I shall quote a few extracts:
The universities entirely accept the view that the Government has not only
the right, but the duty, to satisfy itself that every field of study which
in the national interest ought to be cultivated in Great Britain, is in fact
being adequately cultivated in the universities....
In the view of the Vice-Chancellors, therefore, the universities may properly
be expected not only individually to make proper use of the resources entrusted
to them, but collectively to devise and execute policies calculated to serve
the national interest. And in that task, both individually and collectively,
they will be glad to have a greater measure of guidance from the Government
than, until quite recent days, they have been accustomed to receive....
Hence the Vice-Chancellors would be glad if the University Grants Committee
were formally authorised and equipped to undertake surveys of all main fields
of university activity designed to secure that as a whole universities are
meeting the whole range of national need for higher teaching and research....
We meet here again with a passionate desire for accepting collective organization for cultural activities, though these actually depend for their vigorous development on the initiative of individuals adjusting themselves to the advances of their rivals and guided by a cultural opinion in seeking support, be it public or private. It is true that competition between universities was getting increasingly concentrated on gaining the approval of the Treasury, and that its outcome came to determine to a considerable extent the framework within which the several universities could operate. But the most important administrative decisions, which determine the work of universities, as for example the selection of candidates for new vacancies, remained free and not arranged collectively by universities, but by competition between them. For they cannot be made otherwise. The Vice-Chancellors' memorandum has, in consequence, made no impression on the life of the universities and is, by this time, pretty well forgotten by the few who had ever seen it.[5]
*
We may sum up by saying that the movements for guiding science towards a
more direct service of the public interest, as well as for co-ordinating the
pursuit of science more effectively from a centre, have all petered out. Science
continues to be conducted in British universities as was done before the movement
for the social guidance of science ever started. And I believe that all scientific
progress achieved in the Soviet Union was also due-as everywhere else-to the
initiative of original minds, choosing their own problems and carrying out
their investigations, according to their own lights. This does not mean that
society is asked to subsidize the private intellectual pleasure of scientists.
It is true that the beauty of a particular discovery can be fully enjoyed
only by the expert. But wide responses can be evoked by the purely scientific
interest of discovery. Popular response, overflowing into the daily press,
was aroused in recent years in England and elsewhere by the astronomical observations
and theories of Hoyle and Lovell, and more recently by Ry1c, and the popular
interest was not essentially different from that which these advances had
for scientists themselves.
And this is hardly surprising, since for the last three hundred years the
progress of science has increasingly controlled the outlook of man on the
universe, and has profoundly modified (for better and for worse) the accepted
meaning of human existence. Its theoretic and philosophic influence was pervasive.
Those who think that the public is interested in science only as a source
of wealth and power are gravely misjudging the situation. There is no reason
to suppose that an electorate would be less inclined to support science for
the purpose of exploring the nature of things than were the private benefactors
who previously supported the universities. Universities should have the courage
to appeal to the electorate, and to the public in general, on their own genuine
grounds. Honesty should demand this at least. For the only justification for
the pursuit of scientific research in universities lies in the fact that the
universities provide an intimate communion for the formation of scientific
opinion, free from corrupting intrusions and distractions. For though scientific
discoveries eventually diffuse into all people's thinking, the general public
cannot participate in the intellectual milieu in which discoveries are made.
Discovery comes only to a mind immersed in its pursuit. For such work the
scientist needs a secluded place among like-minded colleagues who keenly share
his aims and sharply control his performances. The soil of academic science
must be exterritorial in order to secure its rule by scientific opinion.
*
T he existence or this paramount authority, fostering, controlling and protecting
the pursuit of a free scientific inquiry, contradicts the generally accepted
opinion that modern science is founded on a total rejection of authority.
This view is rooted in a sequence of important historical antecedents which
we must acknowledge here. It is a fact that the Copernicans had to struggle
with the authority of Aristotle upheld by the Roman Church, and by the Lutherans
invoking the Bible; that Vesalius founded the modern study of human anatomy
by breaking the authority of Galen. Throughout the formative centuries of
modern science, the rejection of authority was its battle-cry; it was sounded
by Bacon, by Descartes and collectively by the founders of the Royal Society
of London. These great men were clearly saying something that was profoundly
true and important, but we should take into account today the sense in which
they have meant their rejection of authority. They aimed at adversaries who
have since been defeated. And although other adversaries may have arisen in
their places, it is misleading to assert that science is still based on the
rejection of any kind of authority. The more widely the republic of science
extends over the globe, the more numerous become its members in each country,
and the greater the material resources at its command, the more there clearly
emerges the need for a strong and effective scientific authority to reign
over this republic. When we reject today the interference of political or
religious authorities with the pursuit of science, we must do this in the
name of the established scientific authority which safeguards the pursuit
of science.
Let it also be quite clear that what we have described as the function of
scientific authority go far beyond a mere confirmation of facts asserted by
science. For one thing, there are no mere facts in science. A scientific fact
is one that has been accepted as such by scientific opinion, both on the grounds
of the evidence in favour of it and because it appears sufficiently plausible
in view of the current scientific conception of the nature of things. Besides,
science is not a mere collection of facts, but a system of facts based on
their scientific interpretation. It is this system that is endorsed by a scientific
interest intrinsic to the system; a distribution of interest established by
the delicate value-judgments exercised by scientific opinion in sifting and
rewarding current contributions to science. Science is what it is, in virtue
of the way in which scientific authority constantly eliminates, or else recognizes
at various levels of merit, contributions offered to science. In accepting
the authority of science we accept the totality of all these value-judgments.
Consider, also, the fact that these scientific evaluations exercised by a
multitude of scientists, each of whom is competent to assess only a tiny fragment
of current scientific work, so that no single person is responsible at first
hand for the announcements made by science at any time. And remember that
each scientist originally established himself as such by joining at some point
a network of mutual appreciation extending far beyond his own horizon. Each
such acceptance appears then as a submission to a vast range of value-judgments
exercised over all the domains of science, which the newly accepted citizen
of science henceforth endorses, although he knows hardly anything about their
subject-matter. Thus, the standards of scientific merit are seen to be transmitted
from generation to generation by the affiliation of individuals at a great
variety of widely disparate points, in the same way as artistic, moral or
legal traditions are transmitted. We may conclude, therefore, that the appreciation
of scientific merit too is based on a tradition which succeeding generations
accept and develop as their own scientific opinion. This conclusion gains
important support from the fact that the methods of scientific inquiry cannot
be explicitly formulated and hence can be transmitted only in the same ways
as an art, by the affiliation of apprentices to a master. The authority of
science is essentially traditional.
*
But this tradition upholds an authority which cultivates originality. Scientific
opinion imposes an immense range of authoritative pronouncements on the student
of science, but at the same time it grants the highest encouragement to dissent
from them in some particular. While the whole machinery of scientific institutions
is engaged in suppressing apparent evidence as unsound, on the ground that
it contradicts the currently accepted view about the nature of things, the
same scientific authorities pay their highest homage to discoveries which
deeply modify the accepted view about the nature of things. It took eleven
years for the quantum theory, discovered by Planck in 1900, to gain final
acceptance. Yet by the time another thirty years had passed, Planck's position
in science was approaching that hitherto accorded only to Newton. Scientific
tradition enforces its teachings in general, for the very purpose of cultivating
their subversion in the particular.
I have said this here at the cost of some repetition, for it opens a vista
of analogies in other intellectual pursuits. The relation of originality to
tradition in science has its counterpart in modern literary culture, 'Seldom
does the word [tradition] appear except in a phrase of censure,' writes T.S.
Eliot.[6] And he then tells how our exclusive appreciation of originality
conflicts with the true sources of literary merit actually recognized by us:
We dwell with satisfaction upon the poet's difference from his predecessors, especially his immediate predecessors; we endeavour to find something that can be isolated in order to be enjoyed. Whereas if we approach a poet without this prejudice, we shall often find that not only the best, but the most individual parts of his work may be those in which the dead poets, his ancestors, assert their immortality most vigorously.[7]
Eliot has also said, in Little Gidding, that ancestral ideas reveal their full scope only much later, to their successors:
And what the dead had no speech for, when living,
They can tell you, being dead: the communication
Of the dead is tongued with fire beyond the language of the living.
And this is so in science: Copernicus and Kepler told Newton where to find discoveries unthinkable to themselves.
*
At this point we meet a major problem of political theory: the question whether
a modern society can be bound by tradition, Faced with the outbreak of the
French Revolution, Edmund Burke denounced its attempt to refashion at one
stroke all the institutions of a great nation and predicted that this total
break with tradition must lead to a descent into despotism. In reply to this,
Tom Paine passionately proclaimed the right of absolute self-determination
for every generation. The controversy has continued ever since. It has been
revived in America in recent years by a new defence of Burke against Tom Paine,
whose teachings had hitherto been predominant. I do not wish to intervene
in the American discussion, but I think I can sum up briefly the situation
in England during the past 170 years. To the most influential political writers
of England, from Bentham to John Stuart Mill, and recently to Isaiah Berlin,
liberty consists in doing what one likes, provided one leaves other people
free to do likewise. In this view there is nothing to restrict the English
nation as a whole in doing with itself at any moment whatever it likes. On
Burke's vision of 'a partnership of those who are living, those who are dead
and those who are to be born', these leading British theorists turn a blind
eye. But practice is different. In actual practice it is Burke's vision that
controls the British nation; the voice is Esau's, but the hand is Jacob's.
The situation is strange. But there must be some deep reason for it, since
it is much the same as that which we have described in the organization of
science. This analogy seems indeed to reveal the reason for this curious situation.
Modern man claims that he will believe nothing unless it is unassailable by
doubt; Descartes, Kant, John Stuart Mill and Bertrand Russell have unanimously
taught him this. They leave us no grounds for accepting any tradition. But
we see now that science itself can be pursued and transmitted to succeeding
generations only within an elaborate system of traditional beliefs and values,
just as traditional beliefs have proved indispensable throughout the life
of society. What can one do then? The dilemma is disposed of by continuing
to profess the right of absolute self-determination in political theory and
relying on the guidance of tradition in political practice.
But this dubious solution is unstable. A modem dynamic society, born of the
French Revolution, will not remain satisfied indefinitely with accepting,
be it only de facto a traditional framework as its guide and master. The French
Revolution, which, for the first time in history, had set up a government
resolved on the indefinite improvement of human society, is still present
in us. Its most far-reaching aspirations were embodied in the ideas of socialism,
which rebelled against the whole structure of society and demanded its total
renewal. In the twentieth century this demand went into action in Russia in
an upheaval exceeding by far the range of the French Revolution. The boundless
claims of the Russian Revolution have evoked passionate responses throughout
the world. Whether accepted as a fervent conviction or repudiated as a menace,
the ideas of the Russian Revolution have challenged everywhere the traditional
framework which modem society had kept observing in practice, even though
claiming absolute self-determination in theory.
*
I have described how this movement evoked among many British scientists a
desire to give deliberate social purpose to the pursuit of science. It offended
their social conscience that the advancement of science, which affects the
interests of society as a whole, should be carried on by individual scientists
pursuing their own personal interests. They argued that all public welfare
must be safeguarded by public authorities and that scientific activities should
therefore be directed by the government in the interest of the public. This
reform should replace by deliberate action towards a declared aim the present
growth of scientific knowledge intended as a whole by no one, and in fact
not even known in its totality, except quite dimly, to any single person.
To demand the right of scientists to choose their own problems appeared to
them petty and unsocial, as against the right of society deliberately to determine
its own fate.
But have I not said that this movement has virtually petered out by this time?
Have not even the socialist parties throughout Europe endorsed by now the
usefulness of the market? Do we not hear the freedom and the independence
of scientific inquiry openly demanded today even in important centres within
the Soviet domain? Why renew this discussion when it seems about to lose its
point?
My answer is that you cannot base social wisdom on political disillusion.
The more sober mood of public life today can be consolidated only if it is
used as an opportunity for establishing the principles of a free society on
firmer grounds. What does our political and economic analysis of the Republic
of Science tell us for this purpose?
It appears, at first sight, that I have assimilated the pursuit of science
to the market. But the emphasis should be in the opposite direction. The self-co-ordination
of independent scientists embodies a higher principle, a principle which is
reduced to the mechanism of the market when applied to the production and
distribution of material goods.
*
Let me sketch out briefly this higher principle in more general terms. The
Republic of Science shows us an association of independent initiatives, combined
towards an indeterminate achievement. It is disciplined and motivated by serving
a traditional authority, but this authority is dynamic; its continued existence
depends on its constant self-renewal through the originality of its followers.
The Republic of Science is a Society of Explorers. Such a society strives
towards an unknown future, which it believes to be accessible and worth achieving.
In the case of scientists, the explorers strive towards a hidden reality,
for the sake of intellectual satisfaction. And as they satisfy themselves,
they enlighten all men and are thus helping society to fulfil its obligation
towards intellectual self-improvement.
A free society may be seen to be bent in its entirety on exploring self-improvement--every
kind of self-improvement. This suggests a generalization of the principles
governing the Republic of Science. It appears that a society bent on discovery
must advance by supporting independent initiatives, co-ordinating themselves
mutually to each other. Such adjustment may include rivalries and opposing
responses which, in society as a whole, will be far more frequent than they
are within science. Even so, all these independent initiatives must accept
for their guidance a traditional authority, enforcing its own self-renewal
by cultivating originality among its followers.
Since a dynamic orthodoxy claims to be a guide in search of truth, it implicitly
grants the right to opposition in the name of truth--truth being taken to
comprise here, for brevity, all manner of excellence that we recognize as
the ideal of self-improvement. The freedom of the individual safeguarded by
such a society is therefore-to use the term of Hegel--of a positive kind.
It has no bearing on the right of men to do as they please; but assures them
the right to speak the truth as they know it. Such a society does not offer
particularly wide private freedoms. It is the cultivation of public liberties
that distinguishes a free society, as defined here.
*
In this view of a free society, both its liberties and its servitudes are
determined by its striving for self-improvement, which in its turn is determined
by the intimations of truths yet to be revealed, calling on men to reveal
them.
This view transcends the conflict between Edmund Burke and Tom Paine. It rejects
Paine's demand for the absolute self-determination of each generation, but
does so for the sake of its own ideal of unlimited human and social improvement.
It accepts Burke's thesis that freedom must be rooted in tradition, but transposes
it into a system cultivating radical progress. It rejects the dream of a society
in which all will labour for a common purpose, determined by the will of the
people. For in the pursuit of excellence it offers no part to the popular
will and accepts instead a condition of society in which the public interest
is known only fragmentarily and is left to be achieved as the outcome of individual
initiatives aiming at fragmentary problems. Viewed through the eyes of socialism,
this ideal of a free society is conservative and fragmented, and hence adrift,
irresponsible, selfish, apparently chaotic. A free society conceived as a
society of explorers is open to these charges, in the sense that they do refer
to characteristic features of it. But if we recognize that these features
are indispensable to the pursuit of social self-improvement, we may be prepared
to accept them as perhaps less attractive aspects of a noble enterprise.
These features are certainly characteristic of the proper cultivation of science
and are present throughout society as it pursues other kinds of truth. They
are, indeed, likely to become ever more marked, as the intellectual and moral
endeavours to which society is dedicated enlarge in range and branch out into
ever new specialized directions. For this must lead to further fragmentation.
of initiatives and thus increase resistance to any deliberate total renewal
of society.
1. M. POLANYI, The Logic of Liberty, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, and
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, p. 12.
2. M. POLANYI, Personal Knowledge, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, and
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958, p. 276.
3. I have analysed the relation between academic and industrial science, elsewhere
in some detail, see Journal of the Institute of Metallurgy, 89 (1961), pp.
401 ff. Cf. Personal Knowledge, pp. 174-84.
4. Here is the point at which this analysis of the principles by which funds
are to be distributed between different branches of science may have a lesson
for economic theory. It suggests a way in which resources can be rationally
distributed between any rival purposes that cannot be valued in terms of money.
All cases of public expenditure serving purely collective interests are of
this kind. A comparison of such values by a network of overlapping competences
may offer a possibility for a true collective assessment of the relative claims
of thousands of government departments of which no single person can know
well more than a tiny fraction.
5. I have never heard the memorandum mentioned in the University of Manchester.
I knew about it only from Sir Ernest Simon's article entitled 'A Historical
University Document', Universities Quarterly, I-2 (1946-48), pp. 189-92. My
quotations referring to the memorandum are taken from this article.
6. T.S. Eliot, Selected Essays, London: Faber, 1941, p. 13.
7. Ibid., p. 14.