Objectivity, honesty, and integrity: How American scientists talked about their virtues, 1945–2000

Publication date

2024-09

Authors

Hajek, Kim M.
Paul, Herman
ten Hagen, SjangORCID 0000-0003-3423-5847ISNI 000000049298873X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

What kind of people make good scientists? What personal qualities do scholars say their peers should exhibit? And how do they express these expectations? This article explores these issues by mapping the kinds of virtues discussed by American scientists between 1945 and 2000. Our wide-ranging comparative analysis maps scientific virtue talk across three distinct disciplines – physics, psychology, and history – and across sources that typify those disciplines’ scientific ethos – introductory textbooks, book reviews, and codes of ethics. We find that, when inducting students into a discipline, evaluating peers, or codifying their professional standards, postwar American scientists routinely named virtues like carefulness, objectivity, and honesty. They applied such virtues not only directly to scholars’ characters, minds, and attitudes (thereby equating virtues with personal qualities), but also to their methods, modes of reasoning, and working habits (in the form of what we call virtue-qualifiers). Strikingly, we find that physicists, psychologists, and historians drew upon largely similar repertoires of virtue. For all of them, scientific work required carefulness, thoroughness, and accuracy. Not all virtues, however, were equally important in all disciplines (notably objectivity), nor did each ethos-forming genre place equal emphasis on the directly personal nature of such virtues. All in all, our research establishes an extended framework for understanding the ways virtues remained present in postwar American scientific discourse writ large.

Keywords

epistemic virtues, history, integrity, physics, psychology, scientific attitude, virtue, History, History and Philosophy of Science

Citation

Hajek, K M, Paul, H & ten Hagen, S 2024, 'Objectivity, honesty, and integrity : How American scientists talked about their virtues, 1945–2000', History of Science, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 442-469. https://doi.org/10.1177/00732753231206773