r*******g 发帖数: 32828 | 1 Tiananmen's bitter legacy
Mara Hvistendahl*
The bloody crackdown on intellectuals in Tiananmen Square on 3 and 4 June
1989 left a lasting impact on Chinese science. The years leading up to the
Tiananmen protests had been ones of remarkable openness, with debates
breaking out over the relationship between scientific development and
political reform. In the repression that followed Tiananmen, dissident
scientists were punished, and some fled China. Thousands of Chinese
scientists who were overseas in 1989 never returned. While the Chinese
government is now aggressively wooing back those scientists—including those
who were involved in the protests—some say that the culture of Chinese
science has shifted.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6187/953.summary
谁有帐号的, 请帮忙贴出来。 | r*****m 发帖数: 3619 | 2 评论贴出来了! 马上所有美国期刊就要登奥黑主席语录,阶级斗争为纲。
Ming Ma
It is really said that journal like Science publishes such biased 'in depth'
report. The author should have done a real in depth investigation before
she published such paper.
Submitted on Sun, 06/01/2014 - 05:23
Reply
joke joke
what a stupid article. It is amazing that the author can make a living by
constantly depreciating China.
Submitted on Sat, 05/31/2014 - 10:49
Reply
Jigang Tian
The main reason Chinese scholars return now is the dire funding situation in
America, and the collapsed American tenure system especially in medical
schools. We have been reading this every day from sources of real news, like
the Cancer Letter by Paul Goldberg. Chinese are free to go if America has
funding. I hope Mara did not intentionally to hide this critical information.
Submitted on Fri, 05/30/2014 - 11:46
Reply
Song Feng
That's quite pessimistic.
I believe it will be much better in next few years.
Submitted on Fri, 05/30/2014 - 08:44
Reply
Xuefeng Zhang
I am a Chinese Post-doc in Germany, and I am a 80's. For me and my friends,
1986's movement is accurately far from us. As I know, most 80's scientists
care less about that. I think interviews only from the protests can be
treated as a bias. As the news of Science magazine, I think the statistics
need to base on the right distribution. Thus, I think many researcher as me
also need to be considered in this news. I do not want to be represented.
Submitted on Fri, 05/30/2014 - 03:48
Reply
Andi Liu
As a science major college student in China, what I see here is huge funding
for basic science research and brilliant scientists working for what they
love, but not the so-called Marxist-science. I know Tiananmen square
incident left a indelible carck on intellectuals hearts, but it did not ruin
China's science. Let alone the Chinese government is continuely purging
itself. That's also why now you see huge amount beautiful researches
conducted by Chinese. Science is the way people exploring the world, and the
world is shared by everybody equally, which includes Catholics, Muslims,
and of course Marxists. Science is never limited in a certain culture, or a
certain form of politics. Original invention can boom everywhere. | r*****m 发帖数: 3619 | 3 轮子连花几百块注册账号的钱也舍不得花啊。赶紧紧急注册几万个支持者。
怎么达赖这个老恐怖分子也不出来挺一下上海的自由斗士? |
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