Description

Something has changed in the culture and values of academic science over the last quarter-century. University science is now entangled with entrepreneurship, and researchers with a commercial interest are caught in an ethical quandary. How can an academic scientist honor knowledge for its own sake, while also using knowledge as a means to generate wealth? Science in the Private Interest investigates the trends and effects of modern, commercialized academic science. This book dives unhesitatingly into some of modern science's messiest and most urgent questions. How did scientists begin choosing proprietary gain over the pursuit of knowledge? What effects have academic-corporate partnerships had on the quality and integrity of science? And, most importantly, how does this affect the public?

Science in the Private Interest: Has the Lure of Profits Corrupted Biomedical Research?

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Paperback / softback by Sheldon Krimsky , Ralph Nader

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Something has changed in the culture and values of academic science over the last quarter-century. University science is now entangled... Read more

    Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
    Publication Date: 31/08/2004
    ISBN13: 9780742543713, 978-0742543713
    ISBN10: 742543714

    Number of Pages: 272

    Non Fiction , Technology, Engineering & Agriculture , Education

    Description

    Something has changed in the culture and values of academic science over the last quarter-century. University science is now entangled with entrepreneurship, and researchers with a commercial interest are caught in an ethical quandary. How can an academic scientist honor knowledge for its own sake, while also using knowledge as a means to generate wealth? Science in the Private Interest investigates the trends and effects of modern, commercialized academic science. This book dives unhesitatingly into some of modern science's messiest and most urgent questions. How did scientists begin choosing proprietary gain over the pursuit of knowledge? What effects have academic-corporate partnerships had on the quality and integrity of science? And, most importantly, how does this affect the public?

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