A Dutch professor
in my own field of social psychology was busted for scientific fraud almost two
years ago. The report of a committee
that conducted a lengthy investigation concluded, last November, that Professor X had
fabricated the data for at least 55 of his papers, and for
10 doctoral dissertations written by his graduate students.
I won’t put
Professor X’s name in my blog because you probably already know it. Even if you don’t, I wouldn’t want my writings
to result in the name generating any more hits in Google than it already does. After having been denounced for conducting
fraud in order to obtain scientific eminence, Professor X spent the past number
of months in psychotherapy, insights from which have been used to write a book,
the only remaining way for him to obtain eminence.
Oprah-eminence.
Apparently
we are supposed to believe that this core dump of psychotherapeutic insights
constitutes “the truth”, ending years of faking data. Hmmm. Professor
X recently told a writer for the New York Times (NYT), who straight-out asked
him about the veracity of his account of the motivations that were driving him
(e.g., desire for beauty and clarity, or because an editor was impatient with
complexity), that he doesn’t have any reason to lie anymore. He doesn’t have any reason to lie anymore.
Doesn’t he? Who is he trying to fool?
I have
known Professor X for most of his career.
I am pleased to note that I never collaborated with him; nor did I ever
review one of his manuscripts for a scientific journal that I can recall. But I can say this: These naïve and
voyeuristic NYT (and other outlet) stories about him miss an important part of
the story. It is knowing that a part of
the story is lacking that makes me doubt Professor X’s claims about
self-insight and personal growth.
The story
part is this: Professor X harbored very motivating and indeed self-defining
clichés about the ways in which social psychologists in the United States conduct
their professional lives, control the field of social psychology, and indeed,
therefore, control his possibility of attaining international acclaim.
He
believed, first, that American academics are “capitalists.” I knew that he thought as much , but Professor X revealed the belief himself in the recent NYT article in this way:
‘“Science is of course about discovery, about digging to
discover the truth. But it is also communication, persuasion, marketing. I am a
salesman. I am on the road. People are on the road with their talk. With the
same talk. It’s like a circus.” He named two psychologists he admired — John
Cacioppo and Daniel Gilbert — neither of whom has been accused of fraud. “They
give a talk in Berlin, two days later they give the same talk in Amsterdam,
then they go to London. They are traveling salesmen selling their story.”’
I can assure you that Professor X thought of these two very successful
American psychologists as capitalists. And
while he might have feigned a common European distain for American capitalism,
he embraced his own made-up view of it (as played out in the realm of science)
and ran with it. He didn’t actually embody
either of the two scientists he cites in the above quotes. He embodied a cliché that he had conjured up. They are doing it, so why not me? But what were those scientists really
doing? He didn’t actually know.
Indeed, Professor X appeared to harbor the suspicion that
his colleagues in the United States, the ones who he felt controlled by, were
engaging themselves in questionable research behaviors. This belief, one that I know to be shared more
broadly in Europe, might cause the most vulnerable scientists to feel that “you
have to do what you have to do” to be famous. If everyone is doing it, then why not do it
too? And this might be particularly OK
if it means conquering American Imperialists.
The cliché of academic imperialism is dangerous because it can work to
promote situational ethics.
“Cliché?”
you snort, “American academic imperialism is a reality!” I say this regarding “American” social
psychology: the reality is much more complicated than cliché.
After and
during World War II many Europeans who would become the first generation of true
social psychologists fled war-torn Europe.
During that same war, Americans who would become the first social
psychologists were charged by the United States government to study – with the
tools of science – human behaviors such as leadership in groups.
The first social
psychologists therefore were both American and European. Many (though not all) of these scientists
happened to settle in the United States, where doctoral training developed into
an undertaking that many European countries could not or decided not to fund. Federal monies in Europe went to primary and
secondary schools. Meanwhile, doctoral
training there continued to be largely the conduct of research with a single professor,
and the summary of this research in the form of a thesis with that professor.
The evolution
of the model for preparing researching social psychologists in the United
States strongly affected the ways in which the field progressed. But the “imperialists” were not Americans
versus Europeans. Many of them were
individuals of both national origins who, for historical reasons, found
themselves defining science and standards in a way that was determined by a set
of historical decisions regarding how and when doctoral training and scientific
research was funded.
Professor X’s
parents are cited in the NYT article for blaming their son’s behavior on “the
system.” Did the writer fail to ask
which “system” the parents were referring to?
I think so. And I think that
leaves out a big part of the story.
What amazes (but in no way surprises) me is that the fame-seeking that led him to fake, lie, and, cheat is now just been fulfilled via different - but still very public - means. I guess if you lose fame, infamy is better than being ignored? And maybe, just maybe, there is the hope for forgiveness as a "victim of the system."
ReplyDeleteDon't hold your breath.
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