FEATURE ARTICLE
Science in 2006, Revisited
From grid computing to genomics, the science fiction of 1986 is fast becoming science fact. There remains equal reward in the signal and in the noise
Lewis Branscomb
Science and Society
My forecast went only as far as thinking about the potential
integration of the social and physical sciences. The main prediction
was the growing recognition that research tools for dealing more
effectively with the major problems facing societies must be
improved. Again putting on the glasses of a scientist in 2006 to
acquire her hindsight, I wrote, "Creative intuition is a
valuable—even essential—tool for both scientific and
artistic progress. In the social sciences, however, intuition had
long proved a dangerous trap. It was easier to be objective when man
studied nature. Man's study of man is the ultimate challenge. But
the challenge had to be faced."
What I did not address in our 2006 retrospective were some truly
important issues that are transforming science in many dimensions.
Perhaps the most serious oversight was my failure to foresee the
highly welcome growth of participation of women in science, not only
as students but among business leaders and senior faculty. In those
senior posts women are still seriously underrepresented, but the
trends are strong and favorable.
My optimism about the growing political support for better
environmental stewardship in the U.S. now seems extravagant in view
of the current administration's reversal of much of the progress of
preceding years. Nor did I anticipate the extent to which science no
longer enjoys the degree of insulation from politics it once
enjoyed. Science, many would say, has become too important to be
left to the scientists. We have many indicators of a new and more
complex relationship between science and society: the rise of
scientific fraud and new quasi-judicial processes to find and punish
it; the insistence by Congress that agencies supporting science
document not only the resulting scientific outputs but the outcomes
in the form of benefits to society; the rise in earmarks by
Congress, diverting billions of dollars from the safeguard of merit
review. None of this should come as a surprise, given the enormous
growth of biomedical research budgets, but it calls for a new
maturity and new sense of accountability on the part of scientists.
Finally, I can hardly be faulted for failing to foresee the rise of
catastrophic terrorism, bringing with it a felt need to constrain
the flow of basic scientific knowledge to terrorists while still
enjoying the fruits of science for medicine, environment and the economy.
But the bottom line to this effort at seeing the future of science
is that the attraction of science as a life's vocation is unchanged.
"In 2006," I wrote, "God still loves the noise as
much as the signal. Man is still aware that with every step forward
in science, two delicious new questions—crying out for
study—were born."

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