Skjellyfetti wrote: The late Nobel laureate Julius Axelrod said, "Ninety-nine percent of the discoveries are made by 1 percent of the scientists."
That's crap, just utter crap, but exactly what you expect from people at top tier places who think schools not in the Ivy League just as well might not exist. Science is constantly building and evolving, and a lot of the ideas come from relatively unimportant papers in disparate fields that are connected by a third person. But that ivory tower scientist is nothing without the raw data and lower tier papers that make his/her work happen. The egos of these people never cease to astonish me.
I'm all for more money for science and universities, but there are some key problems that should get taken care of first. For one, most of that money goes to paying graduate student and post doc stipends and, for grad students, tuition. Where I am, the stipend is $25000 or so, but tuition is $40,000. That money comes from the government (NIH), but tuition is a paper cost. I don't take classes (except made up ones that are auto-pass and exist solely so they can charge me tuition), its just my school bilking the government for money. The school also takes a sizeable cut of any grant money the lab receives; we got a $1.5 million grant and the school took $500,000 of it right off the top. Only a fraction of the money actually gets to the research, making NIH much more efficient than universities. The government should restrict how much cash can actually go to the institution and how much goes to the lab and actual research, and they shouldn't charge tuition for students not taking real classes. Some places (Scripps in La Jolla) don't take money from grants, and they attract top tier talent for it.
The bigger problem, IMO, is the law that states schools have to patent inventions resulting from research if the professor wants it done. This takes the focus off science and onto money. My boss won't move a finger to publish until his IP rights are lock solid; this not only slows the pace of research, but makes it much less likely for others to use our results for anything worthwhile. Maybe Pfizer will give him $25000 in cash to use the technology, but it only benefits him, not others. Add to that the fact that
publically funded science leads to private profit. Its the same kind of thing that had people up in arms over TARP; money from NIH, NSF, DoD, etc. funded projects should get paid back to the government to some extent.
One thing that is changing (and its a good thing) is that everyone will have access to the results of publically funded research; before you had to pay ridiculous amounts of money to get access to the journals they're published in.
Scientists (well professors, anyway) by and large are egotistic assholes with a huge amount of disdain for 'regular people.' They just want your money and for you to shut up, because they know better. When it comes to individual projects, that's true. Politicians have no business decided what science gets funded (beyond broad scope stuff like NASA vs. cancer - those are societal decisions), but that means academics need to do a better job of self-policing and right now its crap. I can't tell you how many pieces of equipment I've bought that cost more than $50,000 and are the size of a laptop (and cost as much to make); they can charge that because its not our money that we're spending - it's yours.