• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 2 comments on A Timely Reminder of What Research Is Good For

  1. For many hundreds of years research was conducted by scientists without much in the way of government funding. Of course those same scientists also did not have to deal with much in the way of the government regulation that drives up the cost of research either. Much of that same government regulation is based on the results of research by our own colleagues in academia by the way. Oh what a tangled web we weave when we have a conflict of interest.

    I do believe that necessity is the real mother of invention however and that any budget cuts will have unintended positive consequences on how research is performed and leading to leaner more focused labs wherein better quality work is done with much less waste.

    1. Elegant sounding arguments, poetical arguments are fine, but it is the rough hard slogging of scientific pursuit that leads to real invention.

      A an unscientific claim that “we can do better with that” sounds nice but it is just that, an unsupported claim.

      – – –

      How appropriate you posted under the name Aristotle, for Aristitle held back the advances of physical science with his hoeneyed words.

      Around 340 B.C. Aristotle said he didn’t believe in the theory of Atoms because you would be putting a restriction on the gods. If the gods wanted to divide an element to something smaller than an atom, they could. The concept that God or gods had unlimited power was quite popular and it kept people from accepting the idea of atoms (something indivisible) for about 2,000 years.

      In addition Aristotle introduced the fifth element that he said all heavenly bodies (Sun, moon, and stars, etc.) were made of. He also said the fifth element could turn cheap metals into gold and cure disease and old age. This started alchemy, the pursuit of the 5th element.
      http://www.chemistryland.com/CHM130S/05-EarlyAtom/EarlyAtom.html

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