Integrity Challenges in McEwan's Solar: Novels on Research Integrity in the Era of Big Science

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This project explores the theme of research integrity in Ian McEwan's novel "Solar," delving into the ethical dilemmas faced by academics in the era of big science. It examines issues like scientific plagiarism, power dynamics in research, and ethical responsibilities of researchers. The narrative revolves around a prominent academic resorting to plagiarism to maintain his reputation, impacting the career of a young post-doc. The research fields covered include quantum physics, nanotechnology, artificial photosynthesis, and climate change. The project also discusses the transition from pure physics to big science and the entanglement of research with politics, industry, and power relationships.


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  1. Integrity challenges in McEwans Solar: Novels on research integrity in the era of big science In research and education Prof. Dr. Hub Zwart RU Nijmegen Faculty of Science Institute for Science, Innovation and Society (ISIS) Department of Philosophy and Science Studies This project has received funding from the European Union s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 665926.

  2. 2010 NRIN 25 May 2016 2

  3. Three Dimensions (Foucault) Knowledge: scientific plagiarism connected with new forms of knowledge and knowledge production Power: plagiarism reflecting power relationships in contemporary research Ethics (the Self): how academics (fail to) constitute themselves as responsible subjects vis- -vis integrity challenges emerging in contemporary research practices NRIN 25 May 2016 3

  4. Narrative: the power dimension A second-half-of-life academic who (notwithstanding prominence and fame) has lost interest in / contact with his area of research and solves his problem through abuse of power, by committing (and concealing) acts of plagiarism. The victim is a young post-doc, exploited by a research manager on whom he is completely dependent for his future career Plagiarism, committed by a wealthy powerful professor at the expense of hard-working early stage researchers NRIN 25 May 2016 4

  5. Research Fields Quantum physics (photovoltaics) Nanotechnology (nano-solar) Artificial photosynthesis Climate change and solar energy (industrial scale) Convergence NRIN 25 May 2016 5

  6. Diagnostics: Knowledge Let the philosophers of science delude themselves to the contrary, pure physics was free of human taint Science moving from pure science to big science (large- scale research, heavily funded, big expectations) where research becomes entangled with politics and policy agenda s, industry ( plutocrats , funding agencies, investors, venture capitalists, managers, international policy makers, international media) Power relationships and integrity challenges involved NRIN 25 May 2016 6

  7. Michael Beard in Solar Beard-Einstein Conflation Scientific Director of the newly established National Centre for Renewable Energy LAPP: the Lordsburg Artificial Photosynthesis Plant), New Mexico Artificial photosynthesis: mimic (plagiarise, copy-paste) the basic molecular processes of life NRIN 25 May 2016 7

  8. Plagiarism is the default Climate change has generated an epic story with a million authors building on archetypal scripts: communal re-creation Plagiarism is the default, acknowledgement the exception it is difficult not to plagiarize, we are plagiarizing continuously (consciously and unconsciously) Virtue is a weak force NRIN 25 May 2016 8

  9. Biomimesis Reverse engineering photosynthesis Plagiarizing nature Discover, then copy the ways of plants, perfected by evolution during three billion years Your humblest pavement-crack weed has a secret that the best dozen labs in the world are only just beginning to understand The leaf as a kind of solar panel NRIN 25 May 2016 9

  10. Second half of life Beard had coasted all his life on an obscure young man s work, a far cleverer and more devoted theoretical physicist than he could ever hope to be... That twenty-one-year-old physicist had been a genius. But where was he now? So long ago, so hard to recall the driven kind of person he once was... Youth: a brief state of grace; those blessed months of frenetic calculation. What a feat of concentration! After midlife: restless boredom, overweight, alcoholic, lack of self-discipline, spoiled, lazy, etc. ( He had done no serious science in years ) NRIN 25 May 2016 10

  11. Plagiarism? Tom Aldous, with a head exploding with ideas But, Beard was the one who had seen the true value of Tom s work, doing the hard work, securing patents, assembling a consortium, progressing the lab work, involving venture capital. And details of surnames were hardly relevant when the issue (climate change) was so urgent... NRIN 25 May 2016 11

  12. Self-exploitation Beard in Solar has burnt himself out, he has emptied himself, and this relentless self- exploitation now fires back at him Beard has lost track of his former Self, his scientific other half , his prolific counterpart He is and is not the quantum physicist he once was. He is and he is not a plagiarist. He is unable to conflate both positions into a coherent wholeness (integrity). Plagiarism to compensate for the loss of his former Self (psychic conflation) NRIN 25 May 2016 12

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