{"id":4065,"date":"1944-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1944-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1944-vol-25-no-10\/"},"modified":"2023-12-04T14:43:34","modified_gmt":"2023-12-04T14:43:34","slug":"october-1944-vol-25-no-10","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1944-vol-25-no-10\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1944 &#8211; Vol. 25, No. 10 &#8211; Importance of Research"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The material history of man is                     the record of a hungry creature seeking food, and finding,                     generation by generation, better and easier ways of keeping                     himself alive. This Letter deals with the research that men                     are making into the originating of new goods, and the production                     of goods in improved ways, with less expenditure of labour                     and capital.<\/p>\n<p> One grievous error made by many people in thinking of the                     peace which is to follow this world war is that victory will                     bring Utopia along with it. No approach to the post-war                     period could be more perilous. Progress will still require                     effort in any new world. Old methods of scientific enquiry                     have been revolutionized, and sciences have been created that                     were undreamed of by the boldest thinkers of yesterday. There                     is no room in a forward-looking society for the slumber                     of fixed opinions, static methods, and unoriginal plans.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, mankind must not be carried away by things                     which are attractive merely by reason of their newness. While                     much of the old fantasy has faded because of its childishness,                     there are new and more subtle forms endeavouring to lure humanity                     behind a dozen kinds of Pied Piper. We laugh at Ponce de Leon                     and his search for the fountain of youth, yet many people                     are still looking for marvels; magic monetary schemes to remove                     the necessity for working, magic foods and pills that will                     prolong life, magic knowledge that will transform personality,                     shortcuts to avoid the real toil of learning, and incredible                     machines, gadgets, and systems of all kinds. It is imperative,                     in the interest of Canada, that a clear middle path should                     be found by government, industry, educationalists and individuals                     between the idea that new truths may have been desirable once,                     but that we have had enough of them now, and the gullibility                     that sees miracles in every retort and a prodigy in every                     new product.<\/p>\n<p>The Schoolmen shook their grizzled heads over the antics                     of Roger Bacon, who dragged specimens into the classroom for                     examination under magnifying glasses, instead of reading about                     them. That was research. Research extends all the way from                     Junior, in his basement toying with his chemistry set, to                     highly integrated laboratories in our universities dealing                     with pure science. If certain obstinate students had not insisted                     on studying subjects which the great wise world disdained                     as perfectly futile, we should have no bathrooms, flying machines,                     cure for diabetes or preventative of diphtheria. Research,                     because it brings comfort and convenience into all our lives,                     has overcome doubt and scepticism. It has taught man that                     he is not the creature of circumstance, but can make circumstances.                     And yet it is necessary to urge that more be done in its support,                     if this country is to maintain its eminence in the world of                     progressive nations.<\/p>\n<h3>Need for Research<\/h3>\n<p>Our national development depends upon the building-up                     of additional new industries, broadening the prospects for                     employment of labour and capital. Canada&#8217;s present prosperity                     is built upon unusual foundations. She is supplying many markets                     that ordinarily take their goods from nearer countries: e.g.                     the British market for bacon, butter and cheese. She is giving                     away huge amounts of her products by way of mutual aid. She                     has pushed her exports to more than twice as much per year                     as ever before, but 80 per cent is made up of purely wartime                     goods.<\/p>\n<p>Every avenue must be explored to find new ways of doing                     things and new things to make. Only by continual advancement                     can industry maintain its system of enterprise, in which individual                     initiative finds its greatest reward. A committee of the Federation                     of British Industries, under Sir William Larke, reached this                     conclusion: &#8220;The application of research is a certain means                     of increasing employment by the improvement of existing and                     the creation of new industries; conversely, the lack of it                     spells stagnation and ultimate bankruptcy.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Great development has been made in wartime, and no one can                     tell to what extent Canadian industry is now engaged in research.                     Much of it is for wartime purposes, and is on the secret list,                     though a great deal will be available for orientation to peacetime                     uses. However, it is not likely that Canada has advanced relatively                     farther than other countries, and these figures, given in                     the House of Commons by the Minister of Trade and Commerce                     this summer, present a striking comparison of Canada&#8217;s relative                     position in expenditures on research:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"20%\" valign=\"top\">Country<\/td>\n<td width=\"10%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">Date<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">Annual Expenditure                         in million dollars<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">Annual Expenditure                         per capita<\/td>\n<td width=\"28%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">Expenditure                         as % of National Income<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"20%\" valign=\"top\">Russia<\/td>\n<td width=\"10%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1934<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">300 to 500<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">$1.82 to $3.<\/td>\n<td width=\"28%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.8 to 1.0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"20%\" valign=\"top\">United States<\/td>\n<td width=\"10%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1935<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">300<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">$2.40<\/td>\n<td width=\"28%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.5 to .6<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"20%\" valign=\"top\">Great Britain<\/td>\n<td width=\"10%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1934<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">30<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.70<\/td>\n<td width=\"28%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.15<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"20%\" valign=\"top\">Canada<\/td>\n<td width=\"10%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1938<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">2.4 to 3.3<\/td>\n<td width=\"21%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.22 to .29<\/td>\n<td width=\"28%\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">.06 to .08<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<p>The Canadian figures, said the Minister, cover all research,                     private and national.<\/p>\n<p>In commenting on the table, the acting president of the                     National Research Council said it is a sound deduction that                     &#8220;Russia, Germany, the United States and Japan were all devoting                     relatively large amounts of their pre-war income to research;                     that Great Britain was far behind quantitatively, although                     it was known that quality was very high; and that Canada,                     on any proportional basis either of population or of national                     income was spending not more than one-eighth to one-tenth                     of what Russia and the United States were allotting to research,                     and probably not more than one-third of Great Britain&#8217;s                     expenditure. Although Canada&#8217;s population is one-tenth                     that of the United States, its research expenditures were                     only one-hundredth; Great Britain&#8217;s total expenditure                     was over ten times Canada&#8217;s, although its population is only                     four-fold.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Research Agencies<\/h3>\n<p>Key agency in Canada is the National Research Council, established                     in 1916. It operates a dozen laboratories; it acts as adviser                     to various departments of government; and its third and most                     important function is in connection with the arranging and                     co-ordinating of national co-operative research                     programs in which various departments and organizations have                     an active interest.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the work is done at universities, all of which are                     in touch with some of the problems being tackled. Dr. Cyril                     James, Principal of McGill University, suggested to the Social                     Security Committee that there might be built up a closer liaison                     between the general public and the research scientists. The                     objective would be to create in the public mind a recognition                     of the fact that the universities work in concert with the                     National Research Council, and to encourage business men in                     Vancouver, for instance, to go to the University of British                     Columbia for help with problems that should be handled there,                     with the understanding that if not solved in British Columbia                     they would be passed on to the Research Council.<\/p>\n<p>The Ontario Research Foundation was established in 1928,                     an endowment fund being created by subscriptions received                     from manufacturers, corporations, and private individuals,                     and contributions by the Provincial Government on a dollar-for-dollar                     basis. The National Chemurgic Committee was organized under                     auspices of the Chamber of Commerce as a national activity                     dedicated to the creation of new wealth and opportunity. The                     Chamber&#8217;s Agricultural-Industrial Committee, appointed                     in 1938, was charged with considering practical steps to find                     new and expanded markets for farm products. There are a great                     many other research projects under various departments of                     government: the Geological Survey, the Topographical Survey,                     the Department of Mines and Resources, the Dominion Observatory,                     the experiment stations of the Dominion Forest Service and                     the Department of Fisheries, all seeking to develop or apply                     Canada&#8217;s natural resources to the welfare of the people. In                     the year before the war Canada had approximately 1,000 industrial                     laboratories employing 2,500 professional and 2,700 non-professional                     workers, with a total investment in laboratory buildings and                     equipment of $10I\/~ million. Most of these laboratories, however,                     were engaged chiefly in plant control and testing work, as                     distinct from original research.<\/p>\n<h3>Agricultural Research<\/h3>\n<p>Agriculture requires particular attention, and highly trained                     specialists of the Dominion Department of Agriculture are                     continuously at work in laboratories, testing plots and experimental                     farms. Believing it essential that there should be an expansion                     of research work for the utilization of agricultural crops,                     the Minister of Trade and Commerce announced a few months                     ago establishment of a laboratory in western Canada to seek                     means of using farm produce, particularly surpluses.<\/p>\n<p>Wheat, the big Canadian crop, is one of Canada&#8217;s great perplexities.                     Surprisingly little has been done in the field of seeking                     new and expanded uses for wheat, both because in most years                     there is little difficulty in disposing of the crop for food,                     and because of the natural characteristics of the grain. Just                     how important a crop can be in the way of yielding cash for                     farmers through off-the-farm utilization is indicated                     by the United States&#8217; use of corn. More than 80 million bushels                     are being consumed in industry, and while this represents                     only 3 per cent of the total grown, it constitutes 33 per                     cent of the farmers&#8217; cash sales of corn, the balance being                     used for feeding livestock.<\/p>\n<p>One significant development of the war has been the mastery                     achieved over dehydration. Research in this field started                     primarily with the idea of conserving shipping space in the                     dark days of submarine warfare, but so great progress has                     been made that the use of dehydrated foods for domestic consumption                     seems to be assured in peacetime. A dozen eggs can be dehydrated                     and compressed to the bulk of one. One shipload of dehydrated                     food is equivalent to 16 ships loaded with bulk foods. Application                     of dehydrating processes will mean that the housewife may                     purchase out-of-season vegetables in compact packages                     for storing on her pantry shelves, and assurance is given                     that there need be no loss of flavour, colour or vitamin content.<\/p>\n<p>In the general field of post-war prophecy Mr. and Mrs.                     Citizen are being led to anticipate a great many gadgets,                     gleaming light metals, colourful unbreakable plastics, mysterious                     radio waves and 500 mile-an-hour transport, all                     of which add up to a somewhat dizzy world. It is true that                     radionics, electronics, radar and all the other magic words                     are in a fair way to being implemented for general use through                     the research of industry and industry&#8217;s initiative and facility                     in adapting their wartime uses to the benefits of peacetime,                     but it is possible that there may be too much talk about the                     &#8220;glamour&#8221; kinds of discovery. The public would do well to                     discount the enthusiasm of crystal-gazers, and should                     not expect too many marvels too soon. Chemistry and physics                     are not miracles. Chemistry is the taking of some of a relatively                     small group of basic substances and so combining them that                     they assume new forms and new properties of use to mankind.                     Physics progresses through applying different forms of energy                     to matter. They are practical sciences, advancing slowly on                     the whole, but sometimes in great bounds, under the hands                     of skilled scientists.<\/p>\n<h3>Universities and Research<\/h3>\n<p>Canada has found a great shortage of scientific workers,                     and far more will be needed in the future than this country                     has hitherto produced. We shall likely have to rely upon our                     own efforts, because every other country will be equally desirous                     of advancing research. No youth can hope, in these days to                     progress far in science without thorough training in fundamentals,                     and university education seems to be basic. Herein lies one                     of the great problems of Canada&#8217;s federal system. One Canadian                     province spends $31.70 per child on education, while another                     spends $83.38, two and one-half times as much. This means                     that in so far as elementary and secondary education and preparation                     for university are concerned children are penalized by being                     born in one part of the country rather than another.<\/p>\n<p>Educational leaders in Canada have at all times co-operated                     eagerly with the government in every contribution that could                     be made to the war effort, and the universities have given                     their resources unreservedly. It is from these universities                     that the research workers must come, but in addition it is                     in the universities that the pure research upon which applied                     science works must originate. This pure science is not something                     which is expected to have immediate specific application,                     but is a seeking-out and storing-up of scientific                     knowledge which may be drawn upon to help solve problems as                     they arise. In consideration of the importance of the contribution                     the universities can make to the stability and advancement                     of the country it is an important duty to see that university                     staffs, stipends, buildings and equipment are all of a grade                     high enough to retain the best scientists. The story of university                     research, when it can be told, will be a notable chapter in                     Canada&#8217;s war effort. Under pressure of war the university                     laboratories have expanded both in material means and in breadth                     of ideas. During quarter of a century these laboratories have                     passed from the era of simple microscopes, sealing wax and                     string in which their early triumphs were gained into one                     where the most complex instruments and machinery are necessary.                     The field of university research is as broad as science itself,                     and will be limited only by the facilities at the disposal                     of individual institutions.<\/p>\n<h3>Industry&#8217;s Contribution<\/h3>\n<p>Establishment of a large number of graduate scholarships                     to develop highly-trained research personnel is imperative                     if Canada is to be enabled to hold her place in the post-war                     world. It is not fair nor is it efficient that the men doing                     important basic scientific work should have to go cap-in-hand                     to individuals or organizations seeking funds with which to                     obtain apparatus and facilities. Some people have suggested                     that federal grants should be made to universities in each                     province to assist in providing research laboratories for                     study of the special resources of each province. There is                     need of a generous attitude by industry. Some scientists fear                     that grants for research might be associated with demands                     for routine services, or that investigations might be limited                     to certain fields. The late Lord Melchett, whose firm gave                     extensive support to the university laboratories of Great                     Britain, said his company expected in return only ideas and                     good men. In the past industry was too much inclined to apply                     the law of the Locrians, who demanded that the proposer of                     something new should stand before the assembly with a halter                     round his neck, to be instantly tightened if the public did                     not then and there approve his proposition. Greater latitude                     than that must be allowed the scientists; whose very first                     requirement is that their spirits should be free to search                     in hidden places for what new things nature may still have                     to yield.<\/p>\n<p>Many companies have prospered without research, but a glance                     over the record will show a still larger number which passed                     quietly away, expiring for sheer lack of new ideas, while                     their proprietors railed against the march of progress and                     hard times. On the other hand, some Canadian industries have                     been getting along fairly well on imported research, but this                     is not likely to continue on the same basis at the war&#8217;s end.                     Canada is so industralized today that her needs will be similar                     to those of the United Kingdom, the United States and other                     industrial countries, and she cannot expect these competitors                     to supply her with their newest scientific developments unless                     she, in turn, is providing them with worthwhile discoveries                     from her own laboratories. Dr. C. J. MacKenzie, acting president                     of the National Research Council, emphasized this in a recent                     address when he declared: &#8220;Apart from the contributions of                     universities and government laboratories, Canadian industry,                     with a few notable exceptions, was existing on technological                     blood transfusions from Great Britain and the United States.&#8221;                     In Great Britain in 1934 industry was responsible for about                     33 per cent of the total expenditures on research, while in                     Canada only from 5 to 7 per cent of the relatively meagre                     total expenditure on research was made by private industry.                     It is not suggested that every industry should immediately                     establish a large research department, but it should take                     stock of its position to ensure that it is devoting to research                     and development the effort and funds needed to cope with its                     particular problems.<\/p>\n<p>It will always be necessary to have industrial laboratories                     study immediate subjects such as the reduction of manufacturing                     costs and the improvement of production, but it will be increasingly                     important for industries to pursue a more fundamental type                     of applied research, to augment similar work and research                     in pure science being carried on in universities. Industry                     can help the universities by indicating projects which are                     most likely to be useful, by providing funds and by showing                     initiative in developing promising results given them by university                     laboratories. Industry can further help the cause of research                     and improve its own position by calling in scientists as advisers                     and experts in the policy-making stages of business,                     and not only as doctors to prescribe treatment after trouble                     has developed.<\/p>\n<p>The Parliamentary and Scientific Committee of the British                     Houses of Parliament has just brought in a report declaring,                     &#8220;We should certainly look forward to spending (on research)                     at least 10 times as much annually after the war if we are                     to provide the basis without which neither our agriculture                     nor industry can effectively meet the needs of the future.&#8221;                     If we translate this into terms of Canadian needs it will                     mean the annual expenditure of at least $50 million, or from                     15 to 20 times the pre-war rate. This scale could not                     possibly be reached within the immediate future, because Canada                     could not find sufficient scientifically trained personnel.                     Dr. MacKenzie gives as his opinion that, with all the available                     personnel at present engaged, the annual expenditure is not                     greater than $10 million. He suggests that Canada should maintain                     in the immediate post-war years her present over-all                     scale of expenditure on research, and look forward to increasing                     this year by year as trained personnel becomes available.<\/p>\n<p>Research is slow. The processes by which acquaintance is                     gained with the universe appear to limp along. The detection                     of another asteriod, the discovery of a new composition of                     chemicals or an application of physics hitherto unknown to                     science would be but trifles if each new fact remained alone.                     The glory of science in its benefaction to mankind lies in                     the blending of all that learned men uncover, and translation                     of the new truths into expansion of human life. The greatest                     mistake Canada could make would be to brush aside research                     as unnecessary or wasteful, or rely wholly upon other countries,                     or disregard the discoveries of science, losing herself along                     other avenues of effort. It is appropriate to recall that                     while Watt was experimenting with the steam engine Adam Smith                     wrote &#8220;The Wealth of Nations&#8221;, in which he referred slightingly                     to the inventor&#8217;s production as &#8220;a fire engine&#8221;, and dismissed                     it from his calculations. Yet this product of a Scottish inventor&#8217;s                     mind was destined to upset all the economic processes the                     world had evolved, and reshape the lives of men.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[24],"class_list":["post-4065","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-24"],"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>October 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 10 - Importance 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\/october-1944-vol-25-no-10\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 10 - Importance of Research - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The material history of man is the record of a hungry creature seeking food, and finding, generation by generation, better and easier ways of keeping himself alive. 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