The Need for an Ethics of Sustainable Knowledge Production

Metaphilosophy 50 (4):551-562 (2019)
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Abstract

The modern research university is an unsustainable institution. It normalizes academic activity along the lines of a scientist engaged in normal science and seeks to measure the success or failure of academics based largely on the quantity of their contributions to a particular discipline, often measured in terms of papers published and conference presentations. The ensuing race to produce academic studies is creating unprecedented mountains of academic studies, but often in haphazard, unstructured, and unsustainable ways, especially in the humanities and the social sciences, which do not discover nomothetic laws or accumulate knowledge in a fashion similar to science. This not only undermines the quality of work being done and the character of academics doing this work but also results in the thoughtless, endless, largely unstructured mountains of new studies that no one can keep up with.

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Modernity and Ambivalence.Zygmunt Bauman - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (2-3):143-169.
Subject index.Richard J. Bernstein - 1983 - In Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics, and Praxis. Oxford: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 277-281.
The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America.Louis Menand - 2001 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 37 (4):635-638.

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