MIT president: Why so many optimistic scientists are losing heart
3 hours ago
- #breakthrough therapies
- #innovation optimism
- #scientific research funding
- Sally Kornbluth emphasizes the importance of optimism for scientists, sharing her own graduate school experience of persistent experimentation leading to new discoveries in cancer cell processes.
- Recent scientific breakthroughs, such as immunotherapies for metastatic breast cancer, CRISPR therapy for genetic disorders, and new treatments for pancreatic cancer, demonstrate how curiosity-driven research over decades has led to life-saving innovations.
- Despite these advances, optimism among scientists is declining due to shrinking federal research funding, with MIT experiencing a 20% drop in federally funded campus research activity and potential reductions in graduate student talent.
- The erosion of basic scientific research threatens future solutions, innovations, and cures, especially as China surpasses the U.S. in R&D funding, and neither industry nor philanthropy can replace steady public investment at scale.
- Without sustained federal support for undirected, curiosity-driven inquiry, the U.S. risks losing its scientific leadership, potentially missing out on future therapies, industries, and technological benefits that other countries may reap.