I wonder what you all make of the hubbub about Templeton funding over at Leiter's blog. As several commenters over there point out, the issue just isn't about Templeton, but about private money being funnelled into philosophy more generally (e.g. funding for programs actively promoting free markets, etc). What do you all think?
Here are some of my thoughts. For my part, I tend to be very wary of the corrupting influence of money. As Peter Woit (a mathematician at Columbia U) has pointed out for a long time now at his blog, Not Even Wrong, money appears to have deeply affected the entire discipline of theoretical physics. The vast majority of funding over the past several decades has gone to string theory, a theory which Woit and others have argued is not falsifiable, and so not even a properly scientific theory. I'm not going to comment on Woit's views on string theory, as I'm not qualified to evaluate them. His broader point, though, seems worth worrying about: the influx of money into physics has, until recently, made it almost impossible not to be a string theorist. Because of money, the vast plurality of jobs in theoretical physics over the past few decades have been in string theory, pushing other legitimate (and perhaps more promising) viewpoints far into the margins.
Setting aside worries about Templeton funding specifically, I can't help but worry that the same will happen to philosophy: that money will serve more and more as a driving force for philosophical inquiry. This, I worry, would probably be a very bad thing. Philosophy, ideally, should be a search for truth, not a search for what people-with-money-would-like-to-promote. But alas, things aren't this black-and-white. For there's a flip-side to all this. Without money, philosophy is increasingly being relegated to the sidelines. There have been, among other things, a disturbing number of philosophy departments either (a) closed down, (b) consolidated into other departments, etc., as a result of economic forces. These considerations seem to be to suggest that, if we want our discipline to flourish rather than decline — and if we want more jobs (and I certainly do) — we should want more money in the discipline, not less.
In short, I think it's a very complex and morally fraught situation, one I am not sure about in any regard. I have many questions, not many answers. What about you all?
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