January 18, 2005

Of What Use?

In a recent post on the landing of the Huygens probe on the surface of Titan, a lamentable, if predictable response was left in the comments, about how this provides value for the taxpayer. I guess the thing of note that this was posted on a blog, which is directly made possible by basic research done by the then Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) which led to the creation of the Internet. It is, of course, debatable whether or not the internet would have arisen without the aid of ARPA, but it is undeniable that, in the history that has unfolded, ARPA has played a significant role.

And this, in particular, was an irony that I just couldn't pass up.

Just about every time mankind reaches a new pinnacle of achievement, there is a member of the peanut gallery who chimes in with something along the line of "Is this worth taxpayer dollars?" or "Why spend money on this when there is XYZ that needs funding?"

This begs the immediate question of why it is worth the taxpayer dollar to conduct fundamental research on science and technology. The first problem that we encounter in determining the future value of research is that it is often unpredictable to the point of being a complete guessing game.

Sometimes, the application is evident only once certain other, heretofore unknown enabling technologies rise to the fore. For instance, the binary counting system (apologies for lack of reference here), was referred to in a very early 20th century mathematical dictionary as being a curiosity devoid of practical application. And, outside of some Boolean logical exercises, it had no use, until its utility in computation was later discovered.

Similarly, sometimes a technology may exist without being useful until a larger infrastructure exists to successfully exploit that technology. Many of you are familiar with the DVD and its earlier predecessor, the VHS and BETA tapes. Some of you may even remember the earlier attempt at DVDs, known as the Laserdisc. But before that, was the RCA SelectaVision Video Disc system, marketed during the early 80's, which captured color video and sound on a grooved vinyl disc. But long, long before that were the Phonovison discs produced during the late 20's and early 30's, which likewise recording moving images and sound on a grooved disc.

In all of these cases, at which point would one be able to effectively predicted that this particular iteration of an idea would be successful and how long after development the concept would become useful. And if this specific attempt was foredoomed to failure, when would the idea catch on? The next attempt? The third? Tenth? When? In retrospect there has never been a completely reliable way to forecast in all cases, without fail, when the next next thing would arrive. The killer app, quite often, is apparent only in hindsight.

I hope that these examples have illustrated that the concept that any given bit of research or exploration today will yield unknown dividends. But, along with that is the notion that the vast, vast majority of discoveries and technological advances are not lost, but become part of the technological genome of the species as a whole.

How does this all tie back to the question of whether or not it is worth it? Well, one has to ask why should the government do anything at all? When does a government effort become a good use of taxpayer dollars? The answer lies in organization. If you require widespread, neat, and organized theft - have a government do it (they call it taxes). If you want a whole lot of people killed and things broken - ask the government in (they call it warfare). Looking for a massive strong-arm protection racket - the government's your guy (also known as law enforcement).

There are simply some ways to increase the net total of human knowledge that can be accomplished most quickly (not necessarily most efficiently) through the application of organized, centralized effort of the kind in which governments specialize.

Why is this a more worthy pursuit than any other organized undertaking? Simply because research and scientific advancement, on average produce a higher, more reliable rate of return for mankind over the long run. Moreover, technological development often benefits the first, wide-scale adopter the most. While, as we've seen above, not all early development equals early profitable adoption, it's is universally understood to be hard to play catch up when someone else is the lead dog. So, if you want to maximize your odds of being the front runner, be willing to accept that occasionally the cutting edge of technology is the bleeding edge.

To compare, look at one of the most common suggestions about where money should be spent, if not on science: social programs. I think that social programs are, on average, of dubious value on a pure accounting basis. But this still doesn't address the broader moral good of looking out for the weakest in your society. While looking out for the weak few does have an unquestionable moral benefit, I would also submit that propelling mankind ahead as a whole also has a strong moral component, a benefit that won't expire in a lifetime.

Or, to look at it another way, I would say that the broader benefit to be derived from expanding human knowledge is a general benefit that must be weighed against the transitory benefit of money spent on late-night basketball or social programs of questionable value targeted at those who may or may not benefit from such efforts.

Not unlike, I suppose, the opposite proposition of how much we will rely on the few (the rich) to bear the burden, through taxation, for the funding of programs to produce benefits for the greater society.

Except that research is tangible and has a long shelf life. Warm and fuzzy feelings about shaking down Bill Gates to put new computers in an inner-city school with horrific dropout rates really donÂ’t have much shelf life at all.

(Simultaneously launched by Bravo Romeo Delta from Demosophia, The Jawa Mercury, & Anticipatory Retaliation)

Posted by: Bravo Romeo Delta at 02:06 PM | Comments (16) | Add Comment
Post contains 1025 words, total size 7 kb.

1 Adam Smith (Scotch professor) said over three hundred years ago that education and defense were the two things that were proper for the government to do. Education to help the less fortunate (now called "underprivileged") acquire the most valuable asset of civilization - knowledge. It is no accident that *ALL* of the signers of the Declaration of Independence had read and internalized NATIONS. By etension basic, fundamental research provides education to grad students. As a Goldwater conservative I support this government spending. One unexpected by product of Federal research in the 60's was TANG (not Rathergate - the powdered orange juice). TCP/IP is a direct result of federal and California government research spending in the late 60's and early 70's. Not basic research in this case; but without TCP/IP your blog would be impossible and I would not be wasting everyone's time reading this.

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 18, 2005 04:34 PM (IcheV)

2 Tang had been on the market for a few years before getting a huge boost when selected by NASA as their "official" in-flight drink.

Posted by: Ted at January 19, 2005 05:34 AM (blNMI)

3 Ted :: You are right. My old brain let me down. I sit corrected.

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 19, 2005 05:56 AM (IcheV)

4 Rod, there are ways of boosting your intelligence, don't give up hope.

Posted by: Anti War at January 19, 2005 09:57 AM (PM/BC)

5 At my age?

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 19, 2005 11:24 AM (ywZa8)

6 Rod, lol. Don't give up sir.

Posted by: Anti War at January 19, 2005 11:27 AM (PM/BC)

7 I have not given up. I just know reality.

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 20, 2005 08:09 AM (IcheV)

8 Rod, at this point I feel kind of crummy about even drawing attention to it, but Adam Smith was Scottish. Although it is entirely possible that he was, in addition to being Scottish, also a Professor of Scotch. If true, I just hope was a scholar of good, high quality Scotch.

Posted by: Bravo Romeo Delta at January 20, 2005 05:14 PM (hIdkY)

9 BRD Us Celts sometimes call ourselves Scotch. It is something we've been doing for centuries. I know you Limmies do not get it. It is pronounced Keltic not selltic BTW.

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 21, 2005 06:59 AM (IcheV)

10 Rod, Oddly enough, I think that it is somehow tied into the whole Scottish v. Irish v. Scotch-Irish thing. Beats me. I just know that nobody has any business asking for Engilsh or Welsh Whisky, and that being a Professor of Scotch doesn't sound too bad.

Posted by: Bravo Romeo Delta at January 21, 2005 09:51 AM (kiA+F)

11 OK BRD you are too clever for me to get really mad at you. I actually enjoy your Anglo wit. Rod Of Celtic ancestory Cerritos

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 21, 2005 01:21 PM (fLlQ8)

12 Anglos are weird.

Posted by: jo macdougal at January 22, 2005 05:03 PM (LbyCD)

13 According to my Irish friend Charlie, The Scots invented Whiskey to keep the Irish from ruling the world. Sure worked in Charlies case.

Posted by: greyrooster at January 22, 2005 07:12 PM (/rKIG)

14 Dog gone it Jo stop picking on BRD

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 23, 2005 04:15 AM (IcheV)

15 greyrooster Ill bet Charlie is happy!

Posted by: Rod Stanton at January 24, 2005 04:48 AM (IcheV)

16 Said that right.

Posted by: greyrooster at January 24, 2005 05:41 PM (MHr0+)

Hide Comments | Add Comment

Comments are disabled. Post is locked.
27kb generated in CPU 0.015, elapsed 0.1461 seconds.
119 queries taking 0.138 seconds, 265 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.