You are deducting wrongly. I am not claiming - in any way - that you are lying. Just misinformed.
So when my former supervisor sat down in my room about two months ago and told me that he didn't get any of the funding he had applied for for his earth-worm project, but said that as he thought it was such a good project, he was going to go through with it anyway, and asked me to bring some small vials with me to Lapland so I could bring any earthworms I might find with me home, he was just misinforming me?
Seriously, I work with this, Claus. I have been part of his projects for about 2 years, much of which was spent working on a project he had no funding for. My salary was paid from an entirely different source, which constituted the main part of my work for him, and for which he did receive funding. But some of it he had to do without funding. It is as simple as that.
???
What difference does that make??
I can't know about science, unless I "do any kind of science" myself?
What kind of arrogant ivory-tower attitude is that?
Curiously, you seem to have made up a post of your own, to which you are replying here. It certainly have no relation to my posts at all. I don't even understand the reasoning behind it, so I will leave it at that.
So, do you do any kind of science yourself?
That may be so - but they don't do it in solitude, do they? No, in order to do real science, they need to exchange information, discoveries and theories with a lot of other people.
Why do you ask a question if you have no intention to let me answer it before you fill in your own reply?
Yes, what you say is true in a general sense, but the scientists don't need to get funded to do it in all areas of science. They do cooperate --- the third paper I am writing with my former supervisor mentioned above will also include a taxonomist from Italy, for instance --- but it is miles away from being "big business". My field, for example, has few if any applications, does not require very much advanced technology require international cooperation and massive funding, and is carried out largely alone. My own supervisor does not work with the organisms I work with even.
Science doesn't progress because there are people sitting alone in their study chamber. Science progresses because of a massive, rapid exchange of knowledge with as many people as possible.
The two are not mutually exclusive, as one described what happens before publication and the other describes what happens after it. Science
does often progress by people like the guy working with Hippoboscid flies mentioned before. He works entirely alone on his project (1), comparing specimens, reading descriptions, and --- eventually --- building keys. I have no idea if he's doing that in a study chamber, but he's not doing it as part of a vast international collaboration.
When he publishes his findings, however, the key is to get the information he has collected and evaluated spread to, and hopefully accepted by, as many people as possible. But those two are different phases of the same study. Science progresses by the combination of both.
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(1) Unless you count the bird banders at Ottenby, Kvismaren, and possibly other places whom he has asked to collect any flies they find on the birds they band, put them in alcohol in a freezer, and send to him when convenient. Apart from occasional collection, they do not contribute anything to the actual research.