Academic freedom for sale
http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/...om-for-sale/KC5jr8K6FVd9RpOxmFB6cI/story.html
UPHOLDING INTELLECTUAL freedom doesn’t have to mean tiptoeing around questionable ethical choices or iffy data.
Recently, the Globe and other publications reported that Willie Soon, a climate-change skeptic at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, had failed to tell some of the journals considering his work that some of it had been funded by fossil-fuel interests — a fact highly relevant to evaluating it. While Soon has benefited from the prestige conferred by the Harvard and Smithsonian names, the Center for Astrophysics has so far been gentle in handling what looks like an ethical lapse — partly for fear of interfering with Soon’s intellectual freedom.
In fact, such freedom is most vital for those who, like Soon, do research that rubs their colleagues the wrong way. But it doesn’t mean researchers should never have to answer for who funds them or how they conduct themselves. “Academic freedom” isn’t an all-purpose excuse, behind which anything goes. And for institutions, the term shouldn’t be bureaucratese for “looking the other way.”
http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/...om-for-sale/KC5jr8K6FVd9RpOxmFB6cI/story.html
UPHOLDING INTELLECTUAL freedom doesn’t have to mean tiptoeing around questionable ethical choices or iffy data.
Recently, the Globe and other publications reported that Willie Soon, a climate-change skeptic at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, had failed to tell some of the journals considering his work that some of it had been funded by fossil-fuel interests — a fact highly relevant to evaluating it. While Soon has benefited from the prestige conferred by the Harvard and Smithsonian names, the Center for Astrophysics has so far been gentle in handling what looks like an ethical lapse — partly for fear of interfering with Soon’s intellectual freedom.
In fact, such freedom is most vital for those who, like Soon, do research that rubs their colleagues the wrong way. But it doesn’t mean researchers should never have to answer for who funds them or how they conduct themselves. “Academic freedom” isn’t an all-purpose excuse, behind which anything goes. And for institutions, the term shouldn’t be bureaucratese for “looking the other way.”
