NYTimes | Last
April, President Obama assembled some of the nation’s most august
scientific dignitaries in the East Room of the White House. Joking that
his grades in physics made him a dubious candidate for “scientist in
chief,” he spoke of using technological innovation “to grow our
economy” and unveiled “the next great American project”: a $100 million
initiative to probe the mysteries of the human brain.
Along
the way, he invoked the government’s leading role in a history of
scientific glories, from putting a man on the moon to creating the
Internet. The Brain initiative,
as he described it, would be a continuation of that grand tradition, an
ambitious rebuttal to deep cuts in federal financing for scientific
research.
“We can’t afford to miss these opportunities while the rest of the world races ahead,” Mr. Obama said.
“We have to seize them. I don’t want the next job-creating discoveries
to happen in China or India or Germany. I want them to happen right
here.”
Absent
from his narrative, though, was the back story, one that underscores a
profound change taking place in the way science is paid for and
practiced in America. In fact, the government initiative grew out of
richly financed private research: A decade before, Paul G. Allen, a
co-founder of Microsoft, had set up a brain science institute in Seattle, to which he donated $500 million, and Fred Kavli,
a technology and real estate billionaire, had then established brain
institutes at Yale, Columbia and the University of California.
Scientists from those philanthropies, in turn, had helped devise the
Obama administration’s plan.
American science, long a source of national power and pride, is increasingly becoming a private enterprise.
In
Washington, budget cuts have left the nation’s research complex
reeling. Labs are closing. Scientists are being laid off. Projects are
being put on the shelf, especially in the risky, freewheeling realm of
basic research. Yet from Silicon Valley to Wall Street, science
philanthropy is hot, as many of the richest Americans seek to reinvent
themselves as patrons of social progress through science research.
The
result is a new calculus of influence and priorities that the
scientific community views with a mix of gratitude and trepidation.
“For
better or worse,” said Steven A. Edwards, a policy analyst at the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, “the practice of
science in the 21st century is becoming shaped less by national
priorities or by peer-review groups and more by the particular
preferences of individuals with huge amounts of money.”
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