Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 SCIENCE IN FRANCE
- 2 THE STRUCTURE OF THE ACADEMY
- 3 THE FUNCTIONING OF THE ACADEMY: SOME POSSIBLE ROLES
- 4 SCIENCE DIVIDED: THE SECTIONS
- 5 THE ACADEMICIANS
- 6 ELECTIONS: ‘GREEN FEVER’
- 7 REGISTRATION, JUDGEMENT AND REWARD
- 8 THE PRINTED WORD
- 9 AN ACADEMY UNDER GOVERNMENT CONTROL
- 10 ‘OUTSIDERS’: THE SCIENTIFIC FRINGE AND THE PUBLIC
- 11 THE INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION
- 12 THE CONTROL OF THE ACADEMY AND OF SCIENCE
- Name index
- Subject index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 SCIENCE IN FRANCE
- 2 THE STRUCTURE OF THE ACADEMY
- 3 THE FUNCTIONING OF THE ACADEMY: SOME POSSIBLE ROLES
- 4 SCIENCE DIVIDED: THE SECTIONS
- 5 THE ACADEMICIANS
- 6 ELECTIONS: ‘GREEN FEVER’
- 7 REGISTRATION, JUDGEMENT AND REWARD
- 8 THE PRINTED WORD
- 9 AN ACADEMY UNDER GOVERNMENT CONTROL
- 10 ‘OUTSIDERS’: THE SCIENTIFIC FRINGE AND THE PUBLIC
- 11 THE INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION
- 12 THE CONTROL OF THE ACADEMY AND OF SCIENCE
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
If institutionalised research is to be productive, a fairly wide margin for the autonomy of its practitioners has to be built into the institutions. One of the central problems for scientific establishments financed and controlled by extraneous agencies thus becomes that of the balance between dependence and independence.
(Norbert Elias, ‘Scientific establishments’ in Sociology of the Sciences, 6 (1982), 4.)From science, all statesmen and politicians want are instrumentalities, powers but not power: weapons, techniques, information, communications, and so on. As for scientists, what have they wanted of government? They expressly have not wished to be politicised. They have wanted support in the obvious form of funds, but also in the shape of institutionalisation and in the provision of authority for the legitimation of their community in its existence and in the activities, or in other words for its professional status.
(Charles C. Gillispie, Science and polity in France at the end of the old regime, Princeton, N.J., 1980, p. 549.)Major institutions deserve their histories no less than leading scientists, although the task may take longer and the interpretation may be more complex. Sometimes an individual catches the imagination of the public as if he were science itself, but scientific organisations in the long run may have greater power and influence than any private individual. Scientific organisations have the power to encourage, to constrain and conceivably even to subvert the scientific endeavour. Controlled and financed by governments in modern times, they are sometimes called upon to unleash and direct powerful natural forces.
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- Science under ControlThe French Academy of Sciences 1795–1914, pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992