1. World problems
  2. Scientific elitism

Scientific elitism

Nature

Scientific activities are insufficiently productive in relationship to the time and resources invested in them, because of the hierarchical institutionalism of the scientific establishment and its elitist nature.

Claim

Science has been institutionalized along the lines of the upper class society which supports it, so that its products will perpetuate and strengthen individual, family and corporate wealth. Scientists are bought with excessive financial and social rewards. Their concerns are often limited to the self-interest of perpetuating high incomes through tenured teaching or research positions. They require power in order to intimidate or suppress work that is disdained or ideologically opposed by the national or international establishment. Often, therefore, scientists through their professional organizations or university faculties, behave as a self-contained, self-elected oligarchy or an apostolically-ordained priesthood whose episcopal synods lay down the dogmas of research and scientific truth.

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Aggravates

Anti-science
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Aggravated by

Related

Strategy

Value

Unscientific
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Elitism
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SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #4: Quality EducationSustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral problems
Subject
  • Science » Science
  • Society » Class, caste, elites
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Nov 25, 2022