Abstract
In late 1916 the British Government finally bowed to pressure from scientists and
sympathetic elements of the public to organize and fund science centrally and established
the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR). Since just before the turn of
the century state funding for science had steadily increased: the National Physical
Laboratory was established in 1899, the Development Commission in 1909 and the Medical
Research Committee in 1913. The establishment of the DSIR marked an end to piecemeal
support and it was therefore a watershed when the statefinally accepted its responsibility to fund science properly, to
develop a coherent science policy
and thus recognise that science and scientists were crucial components of modern national life;
not just in wartime, but in the development of the peacetime economy as well.At least this is how the history of the DSIR is currently still represented. The following
analysis is more sensitive than previous treatments as it points out that the state's
organization of a centrally planned and funded national policy for science began before the
DSIR, and that this new body (in its support of pure research) reflected priorities
established before the outbreak of the war. In previous accounts the DSIR was presented
as a total break with the laissez-faire past. So, as historians we no longer follow the
special pleading of the contemporary science lobby in arguing that the state was deaf to the
needs of modern science. However, I want to argue that we are still deaf to the wider concerns
of this contemporary pro-science rhetoric, which argued not only for centrally planned and
funded science, but also often that scientists themselves should make policy for science.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History
Cited by
34 articles.
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