This article discusses the widespread belief that secrecy in science is increasing—and that secrecy in science is ethically problematic. To what extent should we worry about this alleged development? In an introduction it is observed that there is very little hard empirical evidence supporting the belief of increasing secrecy in science. Evidence seems mostly to be of the anecdotal kind. The “purist ideology” of science, in which openness of research figures prominently as normative basis, is revealed as one-sided with respect to accepted practice. Issues of commercialization of science and patenting are discussed, and it is claimed that what is ethically problematic is less related to secrecy than to more general ethical issues regarding the social consequences of scientific knowledge. On the basis of a particular case, an area of scientific research is introduced for which it is claimed that secrecy does constitute a serious problem. This area has been characterized, by Funtowicz and Ravetz, as “postnormal science!’ It is claimed that postnormal science and regulatory science necessitate new institutional mechanisms inside science to tackle ethical dilemmas.
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Summer 1996
June 01 1996
Toward More Secrecy in Science? Comments on Some Structural Changes in Science—and on Their Implications for an Ethics of Science
Matthias Kaiser
Matthias Kaiser
The Norwegian National Committee for Research Ethics in Science and Technology
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Matthias Kaiser
The Norwegian National Committee for Research Ethics in Science and Technology
Online ISSN: 1530-9274
Print ISSN: 1063-6145
©1996 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
1996
The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
Perspectives on Science (1996) 4 (2): 207–230.
Citation
Matthias Kaiser; Toward More Secrecy in Science? Comments on Some Structural Changes in Science—and on Their Implications for an Ethics of Science. Perspectives on Science 1996; 4 (2): 207–230. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/posc_a_00504
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