|
I had the opposite reaction, which is that the problem is most definitely not rooted in the media. The problem is with science itself, which is fundamentally broken as a community. I agree that the media are maybe perpetuating certain problems, or are providing dysfunctional incentives, but the root problem is with the scientific and academic community, not the media. Scientists run the journals that have gone amok, are in charge of the tenure processes that reward outdated practices, and run the grant systems that are broken. Universities' public relations departments bait media to hype their scientists' findings. Etc. etc. etc. I was an exchange just now where this played out with a project. I don't want to get into details, but the media were pushing hard for a misleading--and blatantly unethical--way of pushing something to the public. So you could blame the media. But anyone who knows anything about the situation knows that certain PIs groom things, arguably over years, to produce this very type of outcome, in part because they can sit back and reap the benefits while claiming to wash their hands of any responsibility when this happens. They manipulate the situation, and then push the blame onto others, including the media, when it suits their interests. Obviously not everyone is like this, but it's naive to believe it's not a systemic problem. |
Scientists do tend to decide who gets grants, but most people I know don't consider those decisions to be too bad per se. The main problem is that the lack of funds causes grant award rates to be so low that very good candidates can be left out, plus when resources are so low the random factors inherent to assessment become too important (with a 50% acceptance rate, a very good project may score lower than it would deserve but still get in, while with a 10% acceptance rate if a single panel member dislikes your project you are likely out).
Not saying that the scientific community doesn't have its share of the blame for its problems, but an important part of the blame is political as well. And scientists are too busy trying to survive in an extremely competitive environment to try and change things by themselves. Honestly I think most of science's problems would be solved just by allocating (significantly) more money to science. Then maybe we would actually worry about doing good science and incentivizing others to do so, rather than about finishing our reviews ASAP so we have time to hastily write another journal article that we need to score points for grants/tenure and not bite the dust. A degree of competitiveness is good, but competitiveness in science is now absolutely over the top and creating all kinds of evil incentives.