What is it about?

This work in five crisp bullets: 1. Science’s crisis is real. A resolution is not in sight, but a Reformation is not impossible 2. The mainstream interpretation of the root causes of the crisis (perverse incentive, too many papers) is insufficient 3. The crisis is due to a transformed role: from emancipation and betterment of mankind to instrument of profit and growth 4. Scientists cannot resolve the problem alone and have high stakes in the preservation of the status quo 5. Institutions are in denial pretending that current predicaments of science do not weaken its privileged role in governance

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Why is it important?

Because if we console ourselves with having understood this crisis as a simple phenomenon of bad practices and incentives we neglect: 1) How it came about that those distortions came to dominate the entire science production and quality control apparatus 2) The evident fact that is the crisis is structural the structures need to change.

Perspectives

This kind of reflections are all the more urgent as science-based institution are by large in denial of the crisis and pretend, just to make an example, that the use of science to formulate, monitor and appraise public policies is not affected by science own quality control crisis.

Professor Andrea Saltelli
University Pompeo Fabra, Barcelona School of Management

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This page is a summary of: What is science’s crisis really about?, Futures, August 2017, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.futures.2017.05.010.
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