Posted on 09/30/2002 11:19:25 AM PDT by madfly
Jan Hendrik Schön and his colleague Zhenan Bao at Bell LabsSix months ago, the young German physicist Jan Hendrik Schön seemed like the next best thing to Einstein. But then some of his colleagues took a closer look at his research and unraveled a scientific scandal.
Two years ago an up-and-coming physicist from Germany named Jan Hendrik Schön burst onto the science scene with some revolutionary experimental results.
The 32-year-old academic, who was involved in researching nanotechnology at the prestigious Bell Labs in New Jersey, claimed he had succeeded in creating field-effect transistors out of tiny molecules that dont ordinarily conduct electricity. These molecules, he reported, could be made to behave like semiconductors, the circuits that form the backbone of computers.
Schöns work, published in renowned scientific journals like Science and Nature, was ground-breaking and quickly catapulted the physicist into the top tier of his field. Almost overnight he became a favored nominee for the Nobel prize.
The first experimental reports were quickly followed up by several more. Within two years time, Schön had published some 90 articles, most of them in leading scientific journals. Working under the feverish pace of the "publish or perish" climate of the scientific community, Schön quickly became a leading figure, something of a superstar among physicists.
"Breakthrough of the Year"
By 2001, Schöns team at Bell Labs was reporting that they could turn nonconductors into semiconductors, lasers and light-absorbing devices. The implications of such breakthroughs for electronics were enormous, and there seemed to be no end to the possibilities for computing circuitry.
That same year Schön was awarded the prestigious scientific "Breakthrough of the Year" by his peers. He was set up to achieve monumental successes for the world of physics.
But then in April 2002, Schöns star began to flicker. A small group of professors and researchers had begun taking a closer look at the wunderkinds data. And what they noticed, didnt quite add up to Nobel prize quality experiments. In fact, their investigations were showing that Schön manipulated his results to support his predictions: the worst possible criticism a scientist could face.
Questionable data
The questions started to arise when a few inquisitive researchers were unable to reproduce Schöns results, despite numerous attempts in well-equipped laboratories.
Rumors then began to circulate, and a small group of scientists led by Princeton physics professor Lydia Sohn and Cornell Universitys Paul McEuen uncovered uncanny coincidences in Schöns results. In three unrelated papers, the graphs charting experimental data appeared to be identical.
Bell Labs then launched a full-scale independent investigation into Schöns research. According to Malcolm Beasley, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University who oversaw the investigation, Schön had substituted figures from various papers, removed data points that disagreed with his predictions and used mathematical functions in place of real data points. In 16 of 24 cases, Schöns data was found to be manipulated or falsified.
When asked about the questionable data in his reports, Schön acknowledged that he had made mistakes. "I have to admit I made various mistakes in my scientific work which I deeply regret," he said speaking to his scientific peers. "However, I would like to state that all the scientific publications that I prepared were based on experimental observations."
Unfortunately for the investigation committee, most of the evidence from the original experiments has vanished, making it difficult to prove whether or not Schön is actually telling the truth about what he claims to have observed. The transistors used in the original experiments are all broken and any attempts to replicate them have failed. Moreover, Schön himself says he deleted the raw data he originally gathered because his "computer lacked sufficient memory."
Guilty of misconduct
For Bell Labs, however, the proof gathered against Schön was more than enough to justify firing the physicist last week on grounds of scientific misconduct. "We are deeply saddened that such a case of scientific misconduct should happen in Bell Labs, for the first time in our 77-year history," said Bill OShea, president of the labs.
A few days later the German Max Planck Institute followed suit and canceled an offer of employment. Schön had been designated to head up a department for solid state research at the institutes laboratories in Stuttgart, but when news broke about Schöns faulty scientific methods, the German researchers wanted nothing more to do with him. "Were not interested any more," said Klaus Irslinger, director of the Stuttgart branch of laboratories. "He has no more chances, thats deadly for his carrier. He cant even stand in front of a school class."
Lesson learnt?
The scientific community, although quick to reject Schön from its ranks, will not be as quick to recover from the shock of enabling someone like Schön to rise so far and fast. When a researcher is able to publish at such a prolific rate with the near awe-struck reverence of the entire physics community and no one stops to question his experiments, it throws a negative light on the reputation of objective scientific inquiry.
The once "highly competent system of rigorous analysis and observation" doesnt hold up any more under the numerous publications in the field, said Ingolf Ruge, director of Systems of Communication at the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Science. Speaking in an official statement on the state of science, Ruge criticized the "neglect of ethics in the scientific community" and said that the sharp referee system of peer review prior to publishing was a "mess."
The entire experience of Schön has generated heated discussion on important questions such as peer review, scientific responsibility and career-motivated progression in science. "Hopefully people will learn something and move forward," Lydia Sohn said in this months issue of Nature.
Just about any paper related to the "free energy field", as well as most of the "climate speculation presented as fact" would fit the bill.
There are lots of "Socrates moments" headed these folks way, now that the adults are again in charge of the helm.
You want to see unjust, unfair and over-reaching? You haven't seen anything yet. Ok, so let's rip into the scientific community at large. Where should I begin? How about the numbing, bureaucratic nature of the whole "grant game" from federal agencies. The varied and ongoing pharmaceutical fiascos at the DEA. Old lazy physicists on the dole at Lawrence Berkeley labs. Celera and HGSI (amongst others) owning patents on the human genome. The inability of NASA over the past 20 years to land a probe on its own butt. Richard Alpert. Making hi-def TV a national priority, and wondering why people still won't buy $1000 TV sets. Kary Mullis at the OJ trial. Dolly the cloned sheep. David Hilbert beating up Kurt Godel. Carl Sagan's novel. Stupid moebius strips. Launching the Hubble telescope with a warped lens. Tim Leary. Knee-jerk pedantic nitpicking at any criticism. I guess that's a good start... oh wait, hubris, narrow-mindedness and arrogance towards non-scientists. How about that?
Ok, so let's rip into the scientific community at large. OK, let's.
How about the numbing, bureaucratic nature of the whole "grant game" from federal agencies. This is the management issue. It inly affects sciene but is not science at all. If you have a problem with that, it is a problem of government.
The varied and ongoing pharmaceutical fiascos at the DEA. Are you going to quote more of the failures of the government as an indication of the lack of ethics on the part of the scientists. Can you differentiate between the two?
Old lazy physicists on the dole at Lawrence Berkeley labs. Oh, my. Were you trying to date any of them and are upset with the rejection?
Celera and HGSI (amongst others) owning patents on the human genome. Again, the question of property rights, public policy -- anything but the ethics of the scientists.
The inability of NASA over the past 20 years to land a probe on its own butt. I see: this is also somehow a manifestation of the failure in the area of ethics. If only the scientists were going to chruch more often, they would surely have a drone orbiting Jupiter by now.
I think you have some unresolved issues that you yourself are facing, which you are trying to project onto others. I may be wrong in that conclusion, of course, buth nothing you have said was even relevant to the issue at hand.
I think you have some unresolved issues that you yourself are facing, which you are trying to project onto others..
Oh, and I forgot! Unwarranted use of pop psychology: Telling critics that they have "unresolved issues", they are "projecting", and similar nonsense, instead of facing up to the criticism. What a cop-out.
Your claims along the line of "oh, it's a management issue, that isn't science" is patently useless. It is similar to religious defenders trying to put "The Church" and "Christianity" into two seperate boxes - when they are intimately intertwined.
Your defense of the scientific community amounts to "we aren't responsible for that". "It's the government's fault". "It's a management issue". Wake up! Prominent scientists fill all those posts. The government hires physicists to oversee LBL. The government hires doctors and pharmaceutical experts at the DEA. It's the scientists that beg the government for funding money in the first place.
So YES, the scientific community at large IS ultimately responsible.
I think they would get more respect if they actually took more responsiblity instead of complaining about "management" and "the government".
Stan Kubrick.
Yes, Christianity and the Church are intertwined, yet different entities; your parallel with what I said is valid.
I cannot argue with someone gor whom "intertwined" means "same:" take no offense, I simply do not know how to explain well what "is" is.
I have exposited the over-reaching character of the previous statement. You think that I fail, and I respect your view. I have nothing further to contribute, however.
The strength of intelligent design is that it provides a non-contradictory or coherent explanation for the existence of information in biological systems and "irreducible complexity." IC refers to an entire biological system that would be inoperable if a single part was removed. Therefore it is theorized that the system could not come into existence gradually. Michael Behe provides some examples of irreducibly complex biological systems here.
As far as I'm concerned, the question of human origins is a wide-open question. Personally, I find the ID arguments more compelling than the evolutionary arguments. Regardless, the issue certainly isn't a slam dunk either way. That's why I believe that both sides should be able to present their cases in a wide open debate.
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