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The
views of the scientific community could be especially relevant today.
Many pressing issues that will shape the lives of Americans and the
world in the coming years will be best addressed by leaders who recognize
that science, science education, scientific expertise, and international
science cooperation are crucial to formulating the best policy.
Lisa
Randall
I am pleased
you are considering me for this advisory position. However, before proceeding
further, I would appreciate some clarification about your vision for
my role in your administration. Particularly in these tumultuous times,
I would like to know that you will not neglect the advice of the scientific
community. Since you have moved my predecessor's office away from the
White House and downgraded his role, refusing to give him the customary
title "Assistant to the President," I cannot help but question your
commitment to furthering and best utilizing scientific advances.
This apprehension
is compounded by your having eliminated my predecessor's deputy from
the National Security Council, explicitly indicating that science is
no longer an integral part of national decision making.
The views
of the scientific community could be especially relevant today. Many
pressing issues that will shape the lives of Americans and the world
in the coming years will be best addressed by leaders who recognize
that science, science education, scientific expertise, and international
scientific cooperation are crucial to formulating the best policy.
Take the
issue of national security. How can we assess other countries' potential
for creating weapons of mass destruction without detailed understanding
of potentially dangerous materials and what is required to transform
them into truly dangerous ones? How can any agency hope to protect "the
homeland" without evaluating our reliance on technology and how best
to safeguard it from interference? And how can we hope to have a stable
world unless the benefits and advances of technology are more widely
distributed?
I fear
I will disqualify myself from this job by pointing out that the threat
of global warming is an issue the scientific community has finally reached
consensus on. Yet the detrimental effects, both economically and environmentally,
of excessive carbon dioxide emissions have been completely neglected
in formulating current policy.
I do not
wish to give the impression that I think the role of scientific advisor
is only to attend to the most pressing issues of our day. It is critical
that the importance of a long-term view of the role and significance
of science does not get subsumed by the more immediate issues. Like
a college education, which is absurdly expensive yet repays itself in
spades, science is difficult to assess with a cost-benefit analysis.
Current scientific policy focuses on short-term achievement and success,
to the exclusion of investigating long-term potential and possibilities.
The long-term
future of science might well involve big expensive tools that take time
to develop and employ. It is essential to develop some riskier ideas
if in the end we are to remain competitive. This is particularly true
for Particle Physics, where progress will only be made with adequately
funded big projects that will most likely happen only with meaningful
international cooperation. It is important that you, the President,
recognize that with action or inaction, we are making a choice about
our long-term competitiveness in this field and physics as a whole.
Europe devotes twice the percentage of its GDP than America to physics.
The European collider facility in Geneva, CERN, has twice the budget
of the main American facility, Fermilab, in Batavia, Illinois. CERN
has been able to develop new projects using only its operating budget;
American facilities lack that luxury.
My focus
on Particle Physics is because it is my field of expertise. But I want
to emphasize that the benefits of Particle Physics, like most scientific
endeavors, spread beyond their immediate goals. Accelerator technology
was developed for purely scientific reasons yet is now routinely utilized
in hospitals. Advances in processing and coordinating large databases
has and will filter out of the physics environment to the world at large.
And exciting ideas and better understanding are essential to stimulating
and promoting the advanced education which sustains our economy.
In summary,
a coherent scientific policy is particularly imperative in the world
of today. There is a real danger of losing the priceless environment,
both physical and intellectual, that enhances our way of life. With
so many technological and scientific issues at stake, it is critical
that corporate interests and political calculations are not the sole
determinants of scientific policy. Let's not sacrifice support for major
scientific advances to short-term political agendas whose legacy will
forever be regretted.
Lisa Randall
Professor of Physics
Harvard University
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