Foreword
Table of Contents
Epigraph
Introduction
PART 1: THE CORPORATIZATION OF AMERICAN SCIENCE
1 The Big Fat Lie
2 The Green Revolution
3 From Green Revolution to Gene Revolution
4 The Tobacco Strategy
5 Fraudulent Pharma
6 Spitting in the Well We Drink From
7 Atoms for Peace?
8 The Academic-Industrial Complex
9 Think Tanks and the Betrayal of Reason
10 The Dismal Science is Certainly Dismal, but is it Science?
PART 2: THE MILITARIZATION OF AMERICAN SCIENCE
11 Science Harnessed to the Chariot of Destruction
12 A-Bombs and H-Bombs
13 Non-nuclear Technologies of Death
14 Bombers, Missiles, and Antimissiles
15 Video-Game War
16 Lethal Autonomy
17 Is Cyberwarfare Really a Thing?
18 American Exceptionalism and the Ultimate Perversion of the
Behavioral Sciences
PART 3: HOW WE GOT INTO THIS MESS…
19 The Explosive Birth of Big Science
20 Operation Paperclip: The Nazification of American Science
21 The RAND Corporation: From "Fuck You, Buddy" to Doomsday
PART 4: ...AND THE ONLY WAY OUT
22 Is a Science-For-Human-Needs Possible?
Acknowledgements
Suggestions for Further Reading
Notes
Reviews and publication notices in Truthout, In These Times, Monthly Review, Science for the People, Jacobin, and other left-wing journals
Clifford D. Conner is a historian of science at the School of Professional Studies, CUNY Graduate Center. He is the author of A People's History of Science (Bold Type Books, 2005) and biographies of three revolutionaries: Jean Paul Marat, Arthur O'Connor, and Colonel Despard.
“The history that Conner has laid bare impels all of us, as
citizens or working scientists, to avoid the Faustian bargain of
American exceptionalism.” —Science for the People Magazine
“Clifford Conner’s examination of the military and corporate
capture of science in the US could not be more relevant. He makes
the urgent case that human needs, and not profits or militarism,
should guide scientific inquiry.” —Sarah Lazare, In These
Times
“The Tragedy of American Science makes a strong case for
freeing science from the fetters of capital and rededicating it for
the good of humanity.” —Against the Current
“I highly recommend this book and consideration of what I take to
be its main message: science could have worked wonders if properly
used (and if a bit of military budgets were spent on something
useful) and perhaps it still can.” —World Beyond War
“We should read [Conner's] book as a political economy of science
because science is embedded in a perverse set of cultural
constraints and incentives allowing it to be misused and
manipulated in a way that endangers our democracy. Conner views
science writ large, encompassing theory (disciplinary science) as
well as technology... The most rewarding part of the book...is
Conner’s analysis of military science since World War II. Among the
scientific and technological military projects discussed by Conner,
which are rarely investigated in today’s popular press, are cluster
bombs, Multiple Independently Targeted Reentry Vehicles, drones,
cyberwarfare, the SDI, and nanotechnologies, those ‘tiny
insect-mimicking drones that operate in swarms, sneak into private
dwelling spaces of targeted victims, and blow their heads off with
microexplosive bombs...’’ —Science, Technology & Human
Values
“American political and intellectual culture today, including
scientific culture, is in a state of decay. The denial of
human-caused climate change, the destruction of scientific records
by the government, the attack on public education, and most
recently, the Center for Disease Control’s banishing words such as
‘scientific-based’ and ‘evidence-based’ are significant indications
of this. The policies of the masters of corporate greed and the
military-industrial complex are ruinous. We can fight back by
discrediting their junk ideas and magical thinking. Cliff Conner’s
book helps immensely in this effort.” —Michael Steven Smith,
Co-host, Law And Disorder Radio
“Clifford Conner’s remarkable study does so much more than simply
ask and answer how American science has become weaponized over the
past century. The Tragedy of American Science is a
thorough and vividly engaging account—a history of science that
draws deeply on social and geopolitical analysis, and with
excellently crafted case studies. It is a call to rethink the myths
of American exceptionalism that, under the guise of scientific
altruism and U.S. foreign policy, have cultivated a
science-for-profit system. Despite its unflinching disdain for the
corporatization of research, policy, and practice, Conner’s story
is not a pessimistic one. Instead, with keen insight, wit, and an
empathetic eye on the future, Conner helps rescue the promise of
science from the tragedy it has become.” —Jacob Blanc, author
of Before the Flood: the Itaipu Dam and the Visibility of
Rural Brazil
“Cliff Conner has brought together journalists, advocates, leakers,
and litigators to restore the principles of free inquiry from its
perversions by the big lies of Big Food, Big Oil, Big Pharma, and
Big War. The method is true and it is simple: they lift the big
rock, and let fresh air and sunlight expose the little, nasty,
squirmy things underneath.” —Peter Linebaugh, author
of Red Round Globe Hot Burning
Praise for Conner’s A People’s History of Science:
“Cliff Conner’s A People's History of Science is a
delightfully refreshing new look at the history of science. I know
of nothing like it...” —Howard Zinn
“A People's History of Science sticks up for little guys...
Clifford D. Conner finds the fingerprints of the common man on
humanity’s great advances.” —New York Times Book Review
“Conner writes clearly and skillfully shows connections as he
ranges across time periods and disciplines from medicine to art to
astronomy.” —Publishers Weekly
“[An] eloquently written book is accessible to lay readers and
equally valuable for scholars. Highly recommended.” —Library
Journal
“Valuable...” —Booklist
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