Addresses the reproducibility crisis in science, tracing its roots to the drive by governments and business to make scientists into competitive entrepreneurs. By analyzing Aristotelian and Stoic models of moral development, it suggests how scientists might rededicate themselves to the scientific ideal to counter threats to scientific integrity.
Addresses the reproducibility crisis in science, tracing its roots to the drive by governments and business to make scientists into competitive entrepreneurs. By analyzing Aristotelian and Stoic models of moral development, it suggests how scientists might rededicate themselves to the scientific ideal to counter threats to scientific integrity.
Paul Scherz is Associate Professor of Moral Theology and Ethics at The Catholic University of America, Washington DC. He publishes broadly and teaches in the fields of bioethics and the relationship between religion and science.
Inhaltsangabe
1. The crisis in science 2. The scientist entrepreneur 3. Teleology and the craft of science 4. The practices that shape the entrepreneurial subject 5. Reshaping the entrepreneurial subject 6. Acquiring the virtue of truth-speaking in science 7. Subjectivity, truth, and theological anthropology.
1. The crisis in science 2. The scientist entrepreneur 3. Teleology and the craft of science 4. The practices that shape the entrepreneurial subject 5. Reshaping the entrepreneurial subject 6. Acquiring the virtue of truth-speaking in science 7. Subjectivity, truth, and theological anthropology.
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