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Why Natural Scientists are a Problem for the CPSU

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2009

Extract

For more than a decade natural scientists have been prominent amongst dissenting Soviet intellectuals. Much effort is expended in the Soviet Union in attempting to stimulate commitment to official values amongst the great mass of the population, and only a tiny minority of Soviet citizens is prepared publicly to question the party's image of Soviet society. Nevertheless amongst the scientific intelligentsia signs of widespread alienation are clear. Even when they fall far short of public dissent, natural scientists are constantly criticized in the party journals for a lack of adequate partiinost' or party spirit.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1978

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References

1 Partiinost' literally ‘partyness’ can also be translated as party-mindedness, partisanship or party loyalty.

2 At the XXV Party Congress (February 1976) there were 15,694,187 members of the CPSU including 636, 170 candidate members, ‘KPSS v tsifrakh’, Partunaya zhizn, No. 10(05 1976), p. 13.Google Scholar For a discussion of the size of the party apparatus see Hough, Jerry F., ‘The Party Apparatchiki’ in Stalling, H. Gordon and Griffiths, Franklyn, eds., Interest Croups in Soviet Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971), p. 49Google Scholar; Barghoorn, Frederick C., Politics in the USSR (Boston: Little, Brown, 1972), p. 55.Google Scholar

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36 Yamolovich, , in Partiinaya zhizn', No. 16 (08 1970). p. 56.Google Scholar

37 Yagodkin, , in Kommunist, No. 11 (07 1972), p. 59.Google Scholar

38 Yagodkin, , in Kommunist, No, 11 (07 1972), pp. 58–9.Google Scholar

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42 Mulkay, , The Social Process of Innovation, p. 19.Google Scholar

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A very special position is occupied by the three areas of biology. Here the level of publication is significantly lower than in the other branches of knowledge. The effort expended by other countries on the development of these areas of biology is distributed proportionately to their effort in chemistry and physics. It is interesting to note that a sharp non-correspondence of effort can be observed only in our country.

Nalinov, V. V. and Mul'chenko, Z. M., Naukometriya (Moscow, 1969), pp. 138–45, 147.Google Scholar

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54 The most comprehensive criticisms of Soviet restrictions on scientific communication are to be found in Zhores A. Medvedev's books.

55 For the descriptions of censorship of ‘Nature’ see Medvedev, , The Medvedev Papers, footnote on p. 131Google Scholar and of ‘New Scientist’ see White, Sarah, ‘With Apologies to Karl Marx’, New Scientist, 13 06 1974, p. 693.Google Scholar

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57 Nalinov, and Mul'chenko, , Naukometriya, pp. 119–23, 162.Google Scholar

58 Whereas foreign and domestic reputations of Soviet Nobel Prize winners in the natural sciences tend to cohere the opposite tendency is observable in literature.

59 Dornan, Peter, ‘Andrei Sakharov: The Conscience of a Liberal Scientist’ in Tokes, Rudolph L., ed., Dissent in the USSR (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1976), pp. 362–3.Google Scholar

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65 Manifesto II in Salisbury, , ed., Sakharov Speaks, pp. 116–34.Google Scholar

66 Igor Shafarevich is a member of Sakharov's Committee on Human Rights.

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74 The continuing scarcity of highly qualified scientists is shown by the small increase in the proportion of scientists gaining research degrees in spite of a massive expansion in the number of scientific workers over the last two decades. Between 1950 and 1973 the number of Soviet mathematicians, physicists, chemists and biologists increased by six and a half times from almost 32,000 to more than 206,000. In 1973 37 per cent of them possessed higher degrees in comparison to 35 per cent in 1950, having dipped in the intervening years to as low as 27 per cent in 1963 and 1964 following several years of very rapid expansion, before recovering in the late 1960s and 1970s when expansion moderated. Vestnik Statistiki, No. 4 (1974), p. 91Google Scholar and Narodnoe khozyaistvo SSSR v 1963, p. 590Google Scholar; v 1904g, p. 700; v 1973g, p. 176 (Moscow: Statistika, 1965, 1965. 1974).

75 In 1970 there were almost seven million specialists with higher education in the USSR, 475 per cent of the 1950 figure. Gvishiani, et al. , Nauchno-Tekhnicheskaya Revolyutsiya, p. 59.Google Scholar

76 On the geographical concentration of scientists see p. 182 above. In 1968 48 per cent of the scientists and scholars employed in the USSR Academy of Sciences were under 35 years old in comparison with 26 per cent in 1950. During the intervening years the average age fell from marginally more than 41 to 38. In the institutes of the Siberian division of the Academy of Sciences at Akademgorodok 85 per cent of the scientists were under 45 in 1966. Semenov, L., ‘Nekotorye voprosy vozrastnoi struktury kadrov i ee vliyanie na nauchnyi potentsial’ in Upravlenie, planirovanie i organizatsiya nauchnykh i tekhnicheskikh issledovanii, tom 3 (Moscow: VINITI, 1970), pp. 438–42.Google Scholar

77 Many of the ideas expressed in this conclusion can be found in Lewin, Moshe, Political Undercurrents in Soviet Economic Debates (London: Pluto Press, 1975).Google Scholar

78 Lewin, , Political Undercurrents, p. 292.Google Scholar

79 Medvedev, , On Socialist Democracy, pp. 4859.Google Scholar Half of all scientists and scholars of all disciplines with higher degrees have been party members since the late 1950s. However, incomplete evidence strongly suggests considerable difference between disciplines even within the natural sciences themselves, but more especially between the natural and the more politically sensitive social sciences. For recently published overall figures see ‘KPSS v tsifrakh’, Partiinaya zhizn', No. 14 (07 1973), p. 17Google Scholar and Narodnoe khozyaistvo v 1972, p. 131.Google Scholar