{"id":3708,"date":"1965-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1965-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1965-vol-46-no-12-the-spirit-of-research\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:22:33","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:22:33","slug":"december-1965-vol-46-no-12-the-spirit-of-research","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1965-vol-46-no-12-the-spirit-of-research\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1965 &#8211; VOL. 46, No. 12 &#8211; The Spirit of Research"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>An Extensive and important venture into world-wide research                     has been launched by the General Assembly of the International                     Council of Scientific Unions. It is to study the relationship                     of the human race to the changes in its environment caused                     by the demands of civilization.<\/p>\n<p>This research is not trying to decide whether civilization                     depends upon science or science upon civilization: that is                     like the question: &#8220;Which came first, the chicken or the egg?&#8221;                     It merely recognizes that something is happening every day                     in countless laboratories throughout the world, and wonders                     whether human beings are measuring up physically and mentally                     and socially to application of the discoveries.<\/p>\n<p>The scientific culture is here to stay, at least for some                     generations. It involves a way of life quite different in                     many respects from that which seemed to our fathers right                     and natural. It embraces not only the devices and gadgets                     which industry develops out of scientific discoveries, but                     our thinking, our hopes and our fears.<\/p>\n<p>Because the rise of science is the most important fact of                     modern life, no student should be permitted to complete his                     education without understanding it. Otherwise, he will grow                     up still viewing science with mere primitive wonder and the                     childish glee that greets a new toy.<\/p>\n<p>Adult education, too, should emphasize science and research                     to encourage the growth of a scientific mental attitude in                     the discussion and study of problems, to emphasize and explain                     the social repercussions of science, and to enable people                     to cope with new conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Scientific research takes no account of likes or dislikes,                     of parties or sects or nationalities. Its business is to find                     out the truth, to discover exactly what things are and how                     they work. The scientist distrusts the plausible and the easy                     and the customary, not because he believes it is not so but                     because he knows it may not be so and he seeks ground on which                     to plant his feet firmly. He knows that the result may not                     turn out to his personal liking, but he hears Socrates saying:                     &#8220;Either we shall find what we are seeking, or at least we                     shall free ourselves of the persuasion that we know what we                     do not know.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Research is the challenging of self-evident truths.                     It seeks systematized positive knowledge. It wants not only                     to explain some part of the whole, but to see the pattern                     entire, and determine how the parts hang together. It glories                     in the lucid beauty of a solution reached after effort.<\/p>\n<h3>Let&#8217;s look at research<\/h3>\n<p>Research is good for the mind and spirit. If you are engaged                     in research, whether scientific, social or commercial, or                     simply looking for a way in which you can live more happily,                     you are unlikely to sink into a series of third-rate                     things.<\/p>\n<p>Research is an activity where truthfulness is essential;                     in fact, truthfulness is the measure of its success. Truth                     does not inhabit the same orbit as vagueness and ambiguity,                     but insists upon definiteness and completeness. Truth refers                     to the way things are, and it is your job as a researcher                     to find it out.<\/p>\n<p>You are not a myth-maker. Either your hypothesis survives                     as a verified fact or valid principle or it dies a clean-cut                     and final death.<\/p>\n<p>There is a custom in some cases of appraisal of a situation                     or judgment of a person to appoint a &#8220;devil&#8217;s advocate&#8221; &#8211;                     one who brings out every possible fact that can be opposed                     to the favourable evidence. The research man has to be his                     own &#8220;devil&#8217;s advocate&#8221;, conducting his own cross-examination                     of his findings. Research invites the detection of error and                     welcomes it, even though the discovery upsets complacency.                     A theory, whether about distant stars or family life, is untenable                     if it embraces even one false principle.<\/p>\n<h3>Everyone is involved<\/h3>\n<p>It is not to be thought that only men in laboratories do                     research. The information on which we conduct our business                     and our private lives, and on which we base our plans for                     the future, is a catalogue of the results of a vast number                     of experiments. The smallest piece of research will be the                     better for application of the principles that guide the biggest.                     Every business man, politician, engineer, teacher and homemaker                     borrows a bit of the glory of the scientific spirit when he                     examines his ideas in an objective way.<\/p>\n<p>What does research mean in terms of everyday life&nbsp;?                     A woman is doing research when she tries detergent after detergent                     until she finds the one that works most efficiently under                     her conditions of washing clothes, her equipment, the sort                     of water that comes out of her tap, and the kind of soil to                     be removed. The merchant is doing research when he studies                     the market so as to match his goods to his potential customers                     at a profit and without waste.<\/p>\n<p>The scientific method introduces some degree of system and                     order into the study of any subject, and forces us toward                     clear thinking and direct expression. We see for ourselves                     how things behave under conditions we can control, instead                     of arguing about how they ought to behave.<\/p>\n<h3>Pure and applied research<\/h3>\n<p>Paul Sears placed professional research on a high pedestal                     when he wrote in his book <em>Charles Darwin<\/em>: &#8220;It is the                     great destiny of human science, not to ease man&#8217;s labors or                     prolong his life, noble as those ends may be, nor to serve                     the ends of power, but to enable man to walk upright without                     fear, in a world which he at length will understand and which                     is his home.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Nothing is easier to start than a fruitless debate on the                     issue of pure science versus applied science. It is not very                     important to most of us to pin labels on laboratories. We                     lump together science and technology, making the word &#8220;science&#8221;                     cover astronomy and medicine, relativity and synthetic chemicals,                     automobiles and radio-activity, electric toasters and                     space flights. But scientists designate as &#8220;pure&#8221; or &#8220;fundamental&#8221;                     or &#8220;theoretical&#8221; science such things as Einstein&#8217;s relativity,                     the constitution of matter and the electro-magnetic theory                     of light and heat, while to applied science or technology                     they assign all the instruments and machines used in industry                     and the home, paints, plastics, electric lights and even the                     atomic bomb.<\/p>\n<p>From the labours of those who were interested only in advancing                     knowledge have come the ideas and the instruments which have                     created new industries. But neither branch would be possible                     without the other, for without the advance of science the                     techniques would fossilize into unchanging crafts, and without                     the stimulus and products of technology science would become                     a vain display of learning.<\/p>\n<p>Has the course of history been changed by scientific research?                     Certainly our way of living has been. Scientists&#8217; discoveries                     in the past half century, turned into inventions by innovators                     and put into productive shape by technicians, have raised                     people&#8217;s expectations to the level of fantasy. &#8221;<\/p>\n<p>And so, while the urge to reach the moon may be essentially                     research of a high order, the necessity of cleaning rocket                     fuel to unprecedented standards is producing techniques which                     may one day be embodied in the household washing machine.<\/p>\n<p>T. H. Huxley, who wrote prolifically on science matters                     in the nineteenth century, said: &#8220;The history of physical                     science teaches that the practical advantages, attainable                     through its agency, never have been, and never will be, sufficiently                     attractive to men inspired by the inborn genius of the interpreter                     of Nature, to give them courage to undergo the toils and make                     the sacrifices which that calling requires from its votaries.                     That which stirs their pulses is the love of knowledge and                     the joy of the discovery of the causes of things.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Even while the results of their discoveries are being turned                     by &#8220;practical&#8221; people into goods and wages, the basic researchers                     are already far away over the ocean of the unknown.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Hans Selye, Director of the Institute of Experimental                     Medicine and Surgery at the University of Montreal, wrote                     a significant paragraph along this line in a <em>Saturday Evening                     Post <\/em>article, later published in <em>Adventures of the                     Mind <\/em>in 1958, and recently included in his own book <em>From                     Dream to Discovery <\/em>(McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1964).                     He said: &#8220;Without basic knowledge of the behavior of distant                     stars, we would not be placing satellites in orbit today.                     Without knowledge about bacteria, there would be no vaccines,                     serums and antibiotics. And without those observations [Mendel&#8217;s]                     on the inheritance of color in peas, modern genetics &#8211; with                     all its importance to agriculture, animal breeding and medicine                     &#8211; could never have developed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is industry that takes science from the ivory tower into                     the market-place, applying pure science to particular                     classes of problems.<\/p>\n<p>It would be stupid not to make good use of the discoveries                     of others, but if we rest upon that without seeing and discovering                     for ourselves we are denying ourselves expression of the greatest                     human attribute.<\/p>\n<p>Are we, like the Athenians when war was threatened by the                     Spartans, sowing only quick-growing things? Dr. Alan                     T. Waterman seemed to think so when he was director of the                     National Science Foundation ten years ago. He deplored the                     fact that the nature of basic research is far from being understood                     by the people of the United States. &#8220;At a critical juncture                     in our history,&#8221; he said, &#8220;when much in our future may depend                     upon the soundness and originality of our basic research,                     the tendency has been to hold its support to an absolute minimum.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Despite the advances in organized research, the creative                     power of the individual still counts most. &#8220;It would be a                     disaster,&#8221; said Prince Philip, &#8220;if the individual inquirer                     working in his own laboratory were discouraged out of existence.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The qualities needed<\/h3>\n<p>What are the qualities needed for research? To suspend judgment                     with patience, to meditate with pleasure, to say &#8220;it is finished&#8221;                     with caution, to abhor imposture: these are some of the qualities.                     Experience, observation and experiment enable us to single                     out the essential factors in a situation and to see how they                     are related to one another.<\/p>\n<p>Research is ongoing. Static thought is knowing exactly where                     Darwin bagged all his theories, ideas and suppositions: constructive                     thought is linking these together so as to learn how he arrived                     at conclusions: research thought is starting where Darwin                     ended and going on from there.<\/p>\n<p>Research must be objective. Objectivity is not a virtue                     in the evidence you gather but in your attitude toward the                     evidence. The wise man is wary of his inclination to view                     every fragment of evidence in the light of facts and suppositions                     and old wives&#8217; tales he had previously acquired.<\/p>\n<p>Research starts from curiosity, which is a manifestation                     of man&#8217;s love of understanding things. It is one of the most                     permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorous intellect.<\/p>\n<p>Curiosity must be active, and must lead to the asking of                     questions which yield significant answers. Ninety-five                     per cent of us imagine that because we are wondering about                     something we are considering it. A really restless mind has                     wrenched itself from its fixities and is challenging things                     hitherto accepted as being obvious. Anything that is unknown                     is important to it.<\/p>\n<p>Research broadens the mind, for this reason: every discovery,                     every question answered, forces new questions upon us. At                     the uttermost reach of our discovery there arises the question:                     &#8220;What lies beyond?&#8221; Whether you ever reach the ultimate is                     not nearly so important as that you maintain an inquiring                     mind.<\/p>\n<p>Observation is a prime requisite in research. Our intellects                     are not their own true selves when they are talking or chopping                     logic, but only when they are seeing and ascertaining, providing                     us with facts to be explained. Galileo&#8217;s way was to choose                     his vantage point for looking and then to describe as simply                     as he could what he saw. He perceived the unwelcome facts                     as well as those which suited his suppositions.<\/p>\n<h3>Imagination and ideas<\/h3>\n<p>We need some suppositions. We should give imagination a                     loose rein, and let it roam around our objective. Many of                     us are afflicted, without having realized it until now, with                     what some people call &#8220;ideational inertia&#8221;. That means simply                     having difficulty in moving from one idea to another idea,                     perhaps a conflicting one.<\/p>\n<p>Research compels us to think new thoughts. It doesn&#8217;t matter                     how small your idea or supposition may be, it requires some                     originality in your mind.<\/p>\n<p>An idea is not something final, but only a thought about                     something. It may be an urge to do something, develop something,                     create something, improve something, facilitate something,                     accomplish something. We must take the idea and formulate                     specifications of how to bring the idea into reality. Even                     the wildest ideas may be tamed into the best behaved and most                     profitable.<\/p>\n<p>Ideas are not always the outcome of bearing down on a problem.                     H. P. Maxim was asked by his daughter how he got his idea                     for the Maxim silencer. &#8220;By watching the way water behaved                     when it went down a drain,&#8221; he replied. A new twist, a different                     look, or an added idea may open a wide vista.<\/p>\n<p>It is evident that research is not merely the classifying                     of information: you must think, even if it hurts. The ability                     to seek for the causes of phenomena is what makes man supreme                     among animals.<\/p>\n<p>Many creative thinkers reach the solution of the problem                     long before they work out any logical proof. Karl Friedrich                     Gauss, great mathematician, confessed: &#8220;I have had my solutions                     for a long time, but I do not yet know how I am to arrive                     at them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If the imagination is to yield any real ideas, it must have                     received a great deal of material from the external world,                     and it must have retained much of the freshness of outlook                     associated with childhood. Imagination can be as simple as                     that of Anne of Green Gables picturing herself in a beautiful                     dress, or it can be as sophisticated as that of Copernicus                     when he put the sun in the centre of the Solar System and                     saw all the planets moving in orderly and dignified orbits.<\/p>\n<h3>Hypotheses and experiment<\/h3>\n<p>Sparked by imagination, our minds become subject to sudden                     insights into problems they have worked on.<\/p>\n<p>Some things turned up in this way may seem to point very                     straight to one conclusion, but if you shift your point of                     view a little you may find them pointing to something entirely                     different. That is why it is wise, in all matters where your                     judgment is called for, to walk around the proposition and                     see it from every side. In other words, the insight must be                     subjected to a test of its validity and worth.<\/p>\n<p>Scientific thinking includes these steps: you determine                     what is your problem; you collect facts for and against, through                     observation and experience; you form an hypothesis or scientific                     guess after discarding what you believe to be irrelevant;                     you test your hypothesis by patient experiment.<\/p>\n<p>Do not allow yourself to be discouraged by the all too common                     sneer that greets an hypothesis. What more have we to guide                     us in nine tenths of the most important affairs of our daily                     life than hypotheses? The great thing is to test the-hypotheses                     before acting on them: it is of the essence of scientific                     method that you do not employ hypotheses which cannot be tested.                     Darwin&#8217;s writings are for all time a model of refusal to go                     beyond the direct evidence, and of careful examination of                     every possible hypothesis.<\/p>\n<p>This evaluation should be done with a fresh eye. This is                     not brought about by using eye-drops or a jeweller&#8217;s                     loupe, but by turning over the thinking apparatus behind your                     eye. Your hypotheses must not become untouchable sacred cows.                     You will not form sentimental attachments for them. You will                     know that research is a history of mistakes, but the mistakes                     led to exactitudes and the exactitudes led to the computer                     and interplanetary flights.<\/p>\n<p>Even when an hypothesis fails to meet the test and must                     be discarded, the negative information it yields is not useless.                     It has narrowed the range, and by so much has increased the                     probability of finding the truth. It has helped to clear the                     ground, so to speak.<\/p>\n<h3>Preparation and effort<\/h3>\n<p>Effective research does not arise from going into a laboratory                     or a factory or an office and saying &#8220;what shall I look for                     now?&#8221; It does not construct anything out of nothing. It requires                     knowledge sparked by an idea. A great deal of solid foundational                     work appears under every discovery.<\/p>\n<p>This is the real reason for accumulating knowledge: so that                     you may have an abundance of material in your mind upon which                     an idea may alight and germinate a thought.<\/p>\n<p>The research man needs to be a good pupil, but he has to                     go further. The pupil picks up information; the student casts                     the facts into new forms; the philosopher-scientist energizes                     the facts with new ideas. This is not a pursuit for shallow                     wits or timid heart or dragging feet, because it implies a                     leap taken by your mind across a dark gulf of nothingness                     into new regions of thought, and the establishing there of                     a bridge-head.<\/p>\n<p>It also demands effort and energy. Coming out of an intense                     creative experience a man may feel his mind all bruises.<\/p>\n<p>We have not yet devised an accounting system that will produce                     a clear-cut balance after adding up the research man&#8217;s                     joy in success and his agony in defeat; his frustrations and                     rebuffs; and the occasional, indeed very rare, entry that                     marks a spot where results came readily and proved out perfectly.<\/p>\n<p>Discovery is made easier today by the fact that research                     people have access to computers and other mechanical aids,                     but great discoveries have been made under harsher circumstances.<\/p>\n<p>Western European people have, over the years, done an immense                     amount of fruitful work with apparatus which a Canadian high                     school teacher would scorn as a &#8220;hay wire and binder twine&#8221;                     contraption. Intelligent improvisation has its proper place                     in research. The research man should be able to cope with                     the unexpected, the unpredictable and the non-existent                     through originality and ingenuity.<\/p>\n<h3>Research is cumulative<\/h3>\n<p>Science is a pedestrian, step-by-step advance                     from lowly beginnings. It is sufficient for the scientist                     to penetrate a few millimetres further into the darkness.                     A lot of people have taken thousands of years to add these                     millimetres into the eight-day orbit of <em>Gemini V<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Obviously, research demands patience, and that is a virtue                     belonging to the strong. The person who truly wants something                     does not snatch. He carries on systematic inquiry, and is                     grateful if he is able to draw aside a corner of the veil                     that hides truth.<\/p>\n<p>The world does not stop when the researcher pulls out his                     plum of discovery, nor should he stop. Every successfully                     completed experiment is a challenge. There is much work to                     do. Noah sent out a dove, and it returned with a leaf in its                     beak signifying the end of the flood. But that was only a                     new beginning. There was still the harbour to be found, and                     the fire to light, and the house to build.<\/p>\n<p>A visitor to Venice stands in awe before the great mosaics                     of St. Mark&#8217;s Cathedral. There is nothing he can say of any                     single stone, save that if it were not what it is and where                     it is the mosaic would lose some of its effectiveness. As                     the poet Arthur Hugh Clough wrote in &#8220;Say not the struggle                     naught availeth&#8221;, the waves breaking on the beach do not seem                     to gain an inch, but &#8220;Far back, through creeks and inlets                     making, Comes silent, flooding in, the main.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The future<\/h3>\n<p>We now know that the scientific attainment which abounds                     in this latter half of the twentieth century can trace its                     ancestry to dew-scented knowledge gathered at first hand                     in the morning of the world. It is coming to fruition fast                     on a large number of fronts, so that the science fiction writers                     are hard pressed to catch up with the scientific scientists.<\/p>\n<p>Bernard Shaw pointed out in his preface to <em>Saint Joan                     <\/em>that the medieval doctors of divinity, who argued about                     how many angels could dance on the point of a needle, cut                     a very poor figure beside the modern physicists, who have                     settled to the billionth of a millimetre every movement and                     position in the dance of the electrons.<\/p>\n<p>The natural and social sciences so much dominate our age                     that, for sheer survival, we must know about them and participate                     in their advancement.<\/p>\n<p>Given the increase of wisdom that should follow the gaining                     of knowledge, nothing that does not infringe the laws of Nature                     need be regarded as impossible or frightening.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[45],"class_list":["post-3708","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-45"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1965 - VOL. 46, No. 12 - The Spirit of Research - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1965-vol-46-no-12-the-spirit-of-research\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1965 - VOL. 46, No. 12 - The Spirit of Research - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"An Extensive and important venture into world-wide research has been launched by the General Assembly of the International Council of Scientific Unions. 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