My claim is that improvements in management functions like identifying and assessing potentially transformative research identification appear plausible by taking advantage of the latest findings in history, philosophy, and cognitive science of scientific revolutions.
I have to agree with ben m on this one.
You seem confused by people asking you to be more exact, provide detail, or be more clear. Let me try to put this into a business/project management perspective and see if it helps you understand what we're asking.
The statement you've posted above sounds like it says something. And it does. But it's not specific. In business terms, this is like a company's mission statement. That's all well and good, but the employees, managers, and so forth are all looking at it going "okay, so what do we do different now?" What you've given is a broad, generalized answer. There's no detail in your suggestion that could help us create new policies or change procedures. If I gave you my company's mission statement, it's a pretty sure bet you couldn't tell me much about what policies we have (beyond the standards everyone has) just based on that.
Your statement is a vague statement of intent, not a plan of action.
OR for another anaology, it would be like someone saying "I think healthcare needs to change. We should focus on accurate diagnostics and provide low-cost care to the patient, with a focus on improved treatment." Sounds great, but what actions would be taken to achieve the goal? Just that statement above doesn't really tell us anything. The main reason it doesn't tell us anything is because there's a lot of disagreement on the terms. For example, accurate diagnostics is great, but this conflicts with low-cost care. Do you run every reelvent test to make sure of what's wrong? Give treatment for the most probable cause based on symptoms and have them come back for tests if it doesn't fix it to save money? What exactly is improved treatment?
Likewise with your statement.What improvements in management are you asking for, specifically? Because I bet you can get a room full of ten managers, ask them all for improvements in management, and get 15 different answers, many mutually exclusive.
What is "potentially transformative" research? Right now, scientists all try to research things they feel are important. It's not like they go out of their way to find research that won't change anything. They are trying to find the next big discovery that will transform our understanding,
especially in physics where it's absolutely known that our current understanding is incomplete.
"Taking advantage of the latest findings". What are the latest findings you refer to, specifically, and how would be take advantage of them? SHould we start a multi-millenia plan to create a super collider in in Neptune's orbit? Because right now that's one of the big hold-ups to going further in our research, we don't have the capacity to test some of the new theories. Theoretical physicists are spending their lives, right now, tryign to find testable consequences of various GUTs that could well provide that transformative research. So what are they not doing right? How should it be different?
In short, what it sounds like to me (and, from comments, to others as well) is that you're simply saying something to sound like you know what you're talking about. You've given a lot of marketing-speak, what I'd equate to PR soundbites from a corporation, and not only failed to identify any specifics about what you actually mean by it, but patronized those who asked you for specifics (including, using the business analogy, your own employees). You seem to be typing just so you can use a lot of jargon and sound smart, even though you have nothing to say.
Sorry if that sounds harsh, but the questions directed at you
are asking for very simple things. Your apparent inability to understand what they are asking can lead to one of two conclusions:
1) You are the only one that sees clearly, everyone else involved in this discussion is unable to understand due to some sort of mental failure.
2) If everyone else is understanding each other, but you aren't understanding anyone, then perhaps the more likely scenario is that the problem is yours.