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The Creativity Crisis - Reinventing Science to Unleash Possibility (Hardcover)
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The Creativity Crisis - Reinventing Science to Unleash Possibility (Hardcover)
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Every day we hear about some fascinating new discovery. Yet anemic
progress toward addressing the greatest risks to humankind -- clean
energy, emerging infections, and cancer -- warns us that science
may not be meeting its potential. Indeed, there is evidence that
advances are slowing. Science is costly and can hurt people; thus
it must be pursued with caution. Yet, excessive caution stifles the
very thing that powers inventiveness: creation. In her boldest book
yet, Roberta Ness argues that the system of funding agencies,
universities, and industries designed to promote innovation has
come to impede it.
The Creativity Crisis strips away the scientific enterprise's veil
of mystique to reveal the gritty underbelly of university research.
America's economic belt-tightening discourages long-term, risky
investments in revolutionary advances and elevates short-term
projects with assured outcomes. The pursuit of basic research
insights, with the greatest power to transform but little ability
to enrich, is being abandoned. The social nature of academia today
also contributes to the descent of revolutionary discovery. In
academia, which tends to be insular, hierarchical, and
tradition-bound, research ideas are "owned" and the owners gain
enormous clout to decide what is accepted. Communalism is
antithetical to idea ownership. Thus science has not embraced the
Web-based democratic sharing of ideas called crowdsourcing, one of
the greatest tools for creativity and social change in our age. A
final battleground between creation and caution is within the
sphere of ethics. Scientists are typically altruistic but sometimes
have all-too-human inclinations toward avarice and conceit. The
most original thinkers are most likely to flout convention. This
tendency can pull them across the lines of acceptable behavior.
Caution is a necessary check on the destructive potential of amoral
creation. Yet, when every individual and institution is considered
a priori to be a threat, adventuresome invention is squelched.
Creation and caution in science should be in balance, but they are
not. For possibilities to unlock, the ecosystem in which science is
done must be fundamentally rebalanced.
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