The State and Science in 1893 Britain
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
DIGG THIS
This article
reviews a 1991 article written by Beryl M. Hamilton, at that time
a member of the Department of Geography at Liverpool Institute of
Higher Education. His article appeared in a refereed journal published
by the Royal Society.
Hamilton’s
work illustrates the state’s corrupting influence on science. It
is all the more persuasive because the incidents he describes occurred
in a different country and time. Particularly fascinating are the
press articles that tear into the cozy relation between science
and state in 1893 Great Britain. I reproduce most of them in the
last part of this article. They do not pull any punches in speaking
of "the official ring of state-endowed science," "meditating
a raid on the taxpayer," scientists who "want more money,"
so that they "‘boom’ their work and reputations," and
"the unscrupulous power of the official [science] syndicate
which then, as now, jobbed science wherever it had a state endowment."
Observations like these by the 1893 contemporary London press fully
support the notion that science and the state should not be mixed.
The whole story
is equally fascinating as it shows how the state’s money subtly
undermines the essential modus operandi of science, which
is open communication.
Hamilton’s
article details a science-and-state controversy that flared up into
public view in Britain in 1893. The science involved was geology.
The specific issue itself is of no great moment to us today, but
a minimum of certain details are needed to understand the roots
of the controversy. The reader can be assured that nothing abstruse
is required here. His or her knowledge of geology is at least as
great as mine, which is nil.
The geologic
issue
Complex geologic
structures occur in the North West Highlands of Scotland. Various
geologists had investigated them from 1844 onwards. Shifts in the
earth’s crust had transposed the usual order of formations (by various
thrusts) such that metamorphic rock (usually lower down) in some
places lay above unmetamorphosed rock. But the tectonic disturbances
that had caused this inversion had left few traces that made them
evident. The formations seemed so normal and undisturbed that they
seemed not to have been formed by thrusts from below. I oversimplify
greatly, making the matter seem obvious. It was not. The region
is large. The formations and types of rock are complex. Formations
are not completely exposed. Fossil evidence plays a role. Different
periods in history are associated with different types of rocks.
The scientific
controversy
The geologists
who studied these formations fell into two groups: those who got
it right and those who did not. The ones who got it right came to
a correct understanding of the earth’s shifts (tectonics). They
did not think that it was normal for this region to have metamorphic
rock on top of unmetamorphic rock. The ones who got it wrong thought
the opposite.
Their controversy
lasted 50 years: "The worst in-fighting occurred between two
groups that were relatively disparate and fairly antagonistic. These
were Official Geology, almost exclusively the Geological Survey,
and Unofficial Geology, the university geologists and amateurs."
The official group worked in the Geological Survey of Great Britain,
a state-funded organization created in 1835. (It still exists.)
Official Geology
was the group that had got it wrong. Unofficial Geology had got
it right. But what was worse than its error was that Official Geology
had suppressed Unofficial Geology and covered up its blunder for
decades.
Official Geology
numbered mainly Sir Roderick Murchison, Sir Archibald Geikie, and
A. C. Ramsey. All three were, successively, Director Generals of
the Geological Survey of Great Britain. Geikie was Murchison’s protégé.
In Unofficial Geology, there were Charles Lapworth and James Nicol.
Nicol and Murchison
worked the Highlands (even together at times) and published between
1844 and 1866. However, they reached different conclusions, Nicol’s
being correct.
Murchison’s
position gave him leeway to suppress Nicol’s views: "Nicol
had come to different conclusions about the tectonics of the area,
anticipating correctly, in essence, those of the Geological Survey
and others working in the 1880s. Murchison had made sure that such
contrary opinions did not receive wide publicity in the Geological
Society as marginal notes in the minutes of the Council Meetings
of that organization suggest. The strong statement of disagreement
with and dissociation from Murchison's opinions that Nicol wished
to append to his 1861 and 1862 papers was refused publication, and
Nicol's achievements received little recognition in his lifetime."
Scientific
publication and gatekeepers
To understand
the importance of Murchison’s behavior, later reinforced by Geikie,
we need to understand how science works. Those unacquainted with
science identify it with the idea of an objective scientific method
that cuts across all sciences. This is inaccurate. The methods and
customs of each science vary greatly from one to the next. The sequencing
and the emphases on such aspects as data collection, observation,
interpretation, theory, and experimentation vary across sciences.
The human role is not routinized and has several critical aspects.
The actual work involves intuition, guesswork, serendipity, play,
modeling, introspection, imagination, and hypothesis formation,
among other things. Differences of theory, findings, and interpretation
opinion abound, and there is no central body that decides who is
right and wrong. One must communicate and persuade others, by publication,
presentations, and conferences.
This leads
into the main feature of science and scientific method: Scientists
have the option to subject claims of knowledge to checking and confirmation.
Even very old and established claims are checked and sometimes
revised or overturned. This procedure and the ability to carry it
out are what give scientific knowledge its verifiable aspect. But
the motivations to carry out such checking are strictly human. They
are affected by all sorts of non-noble incentives and considerations,
such as whether the work will be published, whether it will bring
fame and advance career, whether it will be accepted by others,
and whether it will attract financial support or lead to financial
gain.
If and when
a science develops publication or career advancement gatekeepers
who are maintained in secure and comfortable positions, such as
Murchison, they can encourage publication and dissemination of their
favored theories and findings and discourage those of contrary schools
of thought. This undermines the motivations to (i) check and confirm
knowledge, and (ii) generate new knowledge. It undermines the entire
scientific enterprise. State support of some scientists and not
others has this general effect of creating an establishment of gatekeepers.
Geikie supports
Murchison
Between 1860
and 1883, Geikie, who was Murchison’s student and successor, took
his side. He shifted as new work of Lapworth came in that confirmed
Nicol’s position. Lapworth published an important paper in 1883
and continued to advance his views for years, including a Presidential
Address at the British Association for the Advancement of Science.
Geikie stonewalled. He neither officially acknowledged Lapworth’s
findings nor used them in his official capacity within Geological
Survey.
Particularly
telling is his strong language in an 1883 internal memo to his senior
petrologist: "... In Sutherland and Ross I had some detailed
work with Peach and Horne the result entirely confirming Murchison's
views and demonstrating the ingenious perversities of Lapworth,
Callaway and Hicks to be _______[Geikie's own pejorative line] of
their authors."
But Geikie’s
hand was being forced. In light of Lapworth’s published work, he
dispatched a new geological team (Peach and Horne) to the Highlands
that very year. After they had looked in the wrong region, Lapworth
told them where to look for the solution to the geologic problem.
Following his advice, they found what he had, and rushed into print
with a November 1884 article. Geikie, still ignoring Lapworth’s
(and Nicol’s) earlier work, wrote a preface to this paper of Peach
and Horne in which he associated himself with what he called their
"brilliant mapping."
The news
articles
In 1893, the
split within the geological community went public. In chronological
order, an apparently unrelated newspaper article appeared first,
itself of interest to our topic. That article criticized the entire
scientific establishment; and it may have helped catalyze the geologic
issue.
On December
1, 1892, The Times published an article "A criticism
of the Royal Society," then and now a state-funded science
organization. The article "accused the scientific establishment
of allowing personal solicitations and social influence to reinforce
the claims of scientific evidence. It was suggested that political
manipulation, and publications that were merely recasting other
people's work, were common." The Society was roundly criticized
for its "predominant scholasticism," for encouraging pedestrian
science, for failing to recognize "important investigators"
like James Joule (of Joule’s Law fame), Charles Darwin, and William
Robert Grove (first fuel cell developer), and for providing scientific
sinecures to the "Parliamentary candidate" for Society
membership. Hamilton writes: "Though this was not a long correspondence
in The Times, it was well enough supported to highlight the potential,
and possibly existing, corruption in science."
Next in time
came the article, dated January 5, 1893 in the journal Nature,
that re-opened the geologic controversy after nine years of quietude
and made it public. It was an article in high praise of Geikie,
penned by a close friend of his who was a geologist, M. De Lapparent.
When it came to the Highlands issue, De Lapparent painted a picture
of Geikie as practically resolving the geologic issue himself: "Accordingly
in the years 1883 and 1884 Messrs. Peach and Horne were entrusted
with a careful study of the Durness and Eriboll districts..."
Furthermore, Hamilton tells us that "De Lapparent had made
no allusion to the work done by geologists who investigated the
North West Highlands, but what was deemed especially reprehensible
was the complete lack of any mention of Lapworth's ‘epoch-making
paper of 1883.’"
The Nature
article provoked a response nine days later. On January 14, 1893,
a 25 column-inch article appeared in the Daily Chronicle,
a London newspaper founded in 1872 that survived until 1960 when
it was absorbed by the Daily Mail. It read in part: "...
the whole thing is delightfully characteristic of State-endowed
science in England. If you are one of the official syndicate who
'run it', you may blunder with impunity and make your country ridiculous
at the taxpayer's expense. Scientific men who can correct you shrink
from the task. They know that the syndicate can boycott them, and
by intrigue keep them out of every post of honour and profit, and
that the syndicate's satellites can write and shout down everywhere
independent non-official critics." The article identified the
syndicate as "Huxley, Hooker, Geikie and Co, Limited
very strictly limited which may be said to 'run' science
in England."
The article
went on: "Murchison, not to put too fine a point on it, 'bounced'
everybody into accepting this absurd theory and the whole forces
of the Geological Survey, with its official and social influence,
together with the unscrupulous power of the official syndicate which
then, as now, jobbed science wherever it had a state endowment,
were spent in perpetuating the blunder and blasting the scientific
reputation of whoever scoffed at it."
The scientific
editor of the paper found it "diverting ...that all the time
that he [Geikie] was wrestling in foro conscientiae [in the
depths of conscience] with doubts as to the soundness of the official
position, and that finally his 'love of truth' prompted him to order
a re-survey of the whole Highland region. In plain English, the
taxpayer, having had to pay for Murchison's bungling survey, was,
because of his successor's 'love of truth', to enjoy the luxury
of paying over again to correct it."
Well aware
of the geologic history, he added: "Geikie's surveyors, who
were not sent out till Lapworth's disclosures frightened the Geological
Survey and its official chief, are credited with proving just what
Lapworth previously demonstrated namely that 'Murchison had been
deceived by the prodigious terrestrial disturbances, of which at
the time nobody could have formed an idea'. Of course the Aberdeen
school who first exposed the blundering of Murchison and the Geological
Survey count as 'nobody' ..."
Geikie was
"conducting an investigation into his own blunders."
Finally, on
February 2, 1893, after some back and forth in which Geikie defended
himself, the scientific editor of the Daily Chronicle let
loose a full-fledged barrage in which he accused Geikie and others
of (in Hamilton’s words) "corruption, concealment and trying
to obtain money as grants under false pretenses." In the editor’s
own words: "Here is the real case between us. The policy of
official scientists whenever they made a blunder, was to persecute,
discredit, and, if possible, 'starve out' every man of science who
corrected them. The fact is that the official ring of state-endowed
science, not content with jobbing the Royal Society and its distinctions,
as their critics have been showing in The Times, are meditating
a raid on the taxpayer. They want more money, and as a preliminary
step their official organ Nature of course begins to 'boom'
their work and reputations ...But when they begin to do this by
coolly confiscating the achievements of private and independent
workers ... we thought it time to protest ...The letters that have
been appearing in The Times make some funny revelations about
the way the Royal Society is 'worked'. Sir Archibald's defence suggests
that if The Times only followed up the game it scented it
would show its readers plenty of sport."
I doubt if
we can find a clearer indictment of science and the state than the
above.
One of these
days in our contemporary land, an investigative reporter will lift
the lid on the major research universities of this land, on their
major financial support from government organs, on their costs to
the taxpayers, on the distortions induced in the sciences, on the
waste, on the pedestrian science that results, on the scientific
biases such a system produces, on the system of science gatekeepers
that state money produces, on the benefits to the state’s power
and select interest groups from science subsidies, and on the effects
of the research focus on student education. Discrediting the science
that supposedly supports the notion of man-made global warming would
be a good start.
These
kinds of effects of the state on science are relatively more subtle
than some others, like foreign wars and agricultural subsidies.
They are also hidden behind a façade of respect for science.
But they are no less important.
May
30, 2007
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Michael
S. Rozeff Archives
|