Last week,
Valerie Strauss wrote, “Why Stephen
Hawking made a mistake backing Israel boycott,” in her Answer Sheet blog in the
Washington Post.
Here
is my extended response:
Academic
boycotts may be ineffective forms of protest and it is certainly difficult to
maintain philosophical consistency—both legitimate reasons for not using this
tactic. However, Strauss’ claim that “Academics is [sic] supposed to be about
the pursuit of knowledge and truth” begs the question, To What Purpose?
Knowledge and Truth may give a person intellectual satisfaction, but they do
not put food on the table, nor do they keep repressive regimes from bulldozing
homes or imprisoning dissidents.
The notion
that academics exist on another plane, divorced from the socioeconomic and
political realities of the rest of the world, is absurd. With many discoveries,
the potential for making profits becomes far more important than the potential
to save lives, leading to patents that prevent poor people from accessing them
(e.g., AIDS medicines in Africa). The emphasis on profits even influences what
research will be done in the first place. More and more scientists are now
relying on funding from private companies, thus biasing their research, while
federal funding for public health and preventative healthcare research has always
been small compared with the share going to research on weapons and patentable
drugs.
The naïve or
uncritical “pursuit of knowledge and truth,” abstracted from their
sociopolitical context, often results in corrupted research, incorrect analyses
and conclusions, and sometimes tragic social consequences (e.g., eugenics
research supporting the racist beliefs that Jews or Africans were subhuman). In
other examples, the “pursuit of knowledge and truth” has been used to justify
research that is inhumane, ecologically devastating or otherwise unethical
(e.g., U.S. radiation experiments on prisoners and soldiers; Mengele’s
experiments on concentration camp prisoners; the Tuskegee syphilis
experiments). And sometimes the sponsors of research have no interest in truth
and are trying to obscure reality (e.g., Big Tobacco’s research “proving”
secondhand smoke is not dangerous; Big Oil and Coal’s research “disproving”
human influenced climate change).
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