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About CSPO

George
E. Brown, Jr.
From:
Past and Prologue: Why I Am Optimistic About
the Future.
William D. Carey Award Lecture, 23rd Annual AAAS Colloquium on Science
and Technology Policy, April 29, 1998.
By George E. Brown, Jr.
We have created a wondrous understanding of our universe, opened new
vistas of opportunity for every human on Earth, and, at least for the
moment, managed to end a period of global confrontation between the
United States and the former Soviet Union that had endured, and
endangered the human race, for the last 50 years. We are perched on the
edge of a new millennium, with society enjoying previously unheard of
advances in human knowledge that science and engineering helped create.
[But the scientific] enterprise seems to be resting on its past success,
idolizing its current organization and operations and hoping that
inertia will carry it into the 21st Century. We employ a passive,
post-hoc justification for our activities to compensate for the lack of
a valid system of performance metrics. We take a narrow view of our
responsibility to society in the transformations that we cause. We have
no foresight or planning operation in place that would tell us how to
define, measure, or achieve greater success. We have no real sense of
how to conceptualize social and economic systems or subsystems and
describe their linkages. And we have no clearly defined values for our
enterprise that are sufficiently visionary to justify the public
confidence and support that we seek for our science and technology
efforts.
Full text of his speech.
More about George E. Brown, Jr.
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http://www.nap.edu/issues/16.1/editorsjournal.htm
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http://www.npaci.edu/online/v3.15/brown.html
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