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Crime and punishment in scientific research
Crime and punishment in scientific research
Mathieu Bouville
mathieu.bouville@
Typical arguments against scientific misconduct generally fail to support current policies
on research fraud: they may not prove wrong what is usually considered research
misconduct and they tend to make wrong things that are not normally seen as scientific
fraud, in particular honest errors. I also point out that sanctions are not consistent with
the reasons why scientific fraud is supposed to be wrong either. Moreover honestly
seeking truth should not be contrived as a moral rule — it is instead a necessary
condition for work to qualify as scientific.
Keywords: cheating; ethics; fabrication; falsification; honesty; integrity; plagiarism;
research fraud; scientific misconduct
I. INTRODUCTION: FRAUD, FROM SCIENCE TO BUREAUCRACY
Both philosophers (Hofmann, 2007; Kaposy, 2008; Schmaus, 1983, 1984) and sociologists
(Merton, 1942; Wunderlich, 1974; Zuckerman, 1977, 1984) have asked, in their different ways, what
is acceptable scientific behavior. Punishment is not their main concern (even though it may follow
from other considerations). On the other hand, scientists, politicians, and lawyers have focused on
sanctions for misconduct.1 There is little interaction between the two: David Guston (1999) found
that the changing public policies of the past few decades corresponded to equally changing
underlying conceptions of scientific norms. But policy makers did not always notice that a different
policy likely means a different construal of scientific fraud; in fact certain policies may not
correspond to any coherent theory at all. Policies are essentially ad hoc: inclusion or exclusion of
certain deeds as scientific misconduct does not come from a careful and consistent argumentation.
To James Dooley and Helen Kerch (2000), “scientific misconduct includes fabrication,
falsification, and plagiari
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