Science, Public Policy and the Scientist Administrator: An AnthologyU.S. National Institutes of Health, 1971 - 265페이지 |
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86th Congress academic science activities agencies allocation applied research applied science areas Atomic basic research basic science Big Science biology biomedical research biomedical sciences biopolitics budget C. P. Snow CERN Committee concern Congress costs countries criteria decisions Department disease economic economists effects effort ence engineers entists eral example expenditures federal government field funds future grants growth high-energy physics human important increase industrial institutions issues knowledge laboratory major medical research ment National Science National Science Foundation nology nomic nuclear organization physical planning political President President's Science problems programs public policy question research administrators research and development responsibility role science and technology science policy scientific choice scientific community scientific research scientists social society sociology of science tech technical tion tional tive United Univer UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA values velopment World War II
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159 페이지 - I think that this is an area that is beginning to attract the attention of the Office of Science and Technology and the President's Science Advisory Committee.
225 페이지 - ... whether the quantity and quality of basic research and graduate education in the United States will be adequate or inadequate depends primarily upon the government of the United States. From this responsibility the Federal Government has no escape. Either it will find the policies — and the resources — which permit our universities to flourish and their duties to be adequately discharged — or no one will.
17 페이지 - Toward the end of the last century and in the early years of this one a new aspect of scientific activities began to emerge.
24 페이지 - Man's Unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his Greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite.
159 페이지 - programs of science and technology of the various agencies of the Federal Government, giving appropriate emphasis to the relationship of science and technology to national security and foreign policy, and measure for furthering science and technology in the Nation. (2) Assessment of selected scientific and technical developments and programs in relation to their impact on national policies.
40 페이지 - Depend upon it, Sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.
66 페이지 - This book is one of a series prepared in connection with the Survey of the Behavioral and Social Sciences conducted between 1967 and 1969 under the auspices of the Committee on Science and Public Policy of the National Academy of Sciences and the Problems and Policy Committee of the Social Science Research Council.
55 페이지 - ... are launched do not materialize in anything very useful. I shudder to think what would happen to science in general if our manned-space venture turned out to be a major failure, if it turned out, for example, that man could not withstand the reentry deceleration forces after a long sojourn In space. It is as much out of a prudent concern for their own survival, as for any loftier motive, that scientists must acquire the habit of scrutinizing what they do from a broader point of view than has...
182 페이지 - Before the Subcommittee on Executive Reorganization of the Senate Committee on Government Operations, 89th Cong., 1st Sess.
52 페이지 - ... of low-energy physics, or the strongest and most exciting motivation for measuring the neutron capture cross sections of the elements lies in the elucidation of the cosmic origin of the elements. Moreover, the discoveries which are acknowledged to be the most important scientifically, have the quality of bearing strongly on the scientific disciplines around them. For example, the discovery of X-rays was important partly because it extended the electromagnetic spectrum but, much more, because...