Description
Book SynopsisAsk questions not on the agenda
Explore ideas wherever they lead
Pursue goals because they''re important
Create options not yet perceived
According to premier researcher Don Braben, these are the vital intellectual processes that underlie all human achievement, the kinds of risk-taking activities that have made our civilization what it is today. Yet, warns Braben, the same pioneer spirit that fueled our meteoric industrial and scientific growth is now being undermined by a growing climate of corporate caution and conformity.
In this groundbreaking manifesto on the importance of scientific freedom, Braben asserts that the greatest long-term risks facing humanity will not come from weapons of mass destruction, prolonged global war, devastating disease or famine, or even from extinction by a huge wayward meteor. Rather they will come from the debilitating attrition caused by the rising tides of bureaucracy and control that are steadily st
Trade Review“…I undeservedly recommend this book to anyone who has puzzled over the growing malaise of contemporary scientific research…Braben is literate, pithy and personable...” (
Nature, Vol.433, 27th January 2005)
“Braben lays out his thesis effectively in the introduction, drawing the reader to commit to the book…a stimulating read” (www.felixonline.co.uk, 2004)
“…(I) recommend this book to anyone involved in or worried about science.” (Chemistry World, October 2004)
Table of ContentsForeword.
Preface.
Introduction,
Chapter 1: Dissent and Research: The Supreme Stimulants.
Chapter 2: The Power of Dissent: From Primates to Superpower.
Chapter 3: The Rise from Oblivion.
Chapter 4: Taming Research: The Problems of Success.
Chapter 5: The Bureaucratic Jungle.
Chapter 6: Prospects for Economic Growth.
Chapter 7: Re-Creating the Golden Age.
Chapter 8: Venture Research.
Appendix 1: Some Results from the Venture Research Initiative Sponspored by British Petroleum.
Appendix 2: The Venture Research Group.
Bibliography.
Index.