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Reflections on Intellectual Independence of Scientists in Eastern Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Alexander Gella
Affiliation:
SUNY, Buffalo, N. Y.
Bogdan Mieczkowski
Affiliation:
Ithaca College

Extract

Personal independence of scientists, particularly in social sciences, presents a multidimensional problem. We propose to base our observations mainly on the careers of scientists in Poland, as seen against the background of the relations between the power elite and the cultural elite in a communist country. There are differences in time and place, but certain general tendencies can be observed.

Type
Notes and Comment
Copyright
Copyright © 1978 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities (USSR and East Europe) Inc. 

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References

Notes

1. Gella, A., “The Conflict Between the Power Elite and the Culture Elite: The Case of Eastern Europe,” paper delivered at the Annual Meeting of the ASA in New York, September 1973.Google Scholar

2. Lipinski in the summer of 1956 organized the First National Congress of Economists, which was one of the decisive steps toward the liberation of the Polish economic thought from the burdens of the Stalinist economists and planners, servants of the power elite.Google Scholar

3. The following thoughts are based on a review article by one of the present authors of three books on consumption published recently in Poland. See B. Mieczkowski, “Ekonomiści krajowi o spożyciu w PRL” (Polish economists on consumption in Poland), Kultura (Paris), 1973, no. 6.Google Scholar