Subject: Patents
This is a much delayed response to Donny L. Hamilton and C.Wayne Smith's comments of June 25, 2002 (Conservation DistList Instance: 16:3 Thursday, June 27, 2002). Their inquiry regarded the issue of information and conservation treatments. We often in our practice come up with new ways of doing things. To a certain extent these solutions are generally modifications of prior practices, but occasionally they are true inventions. Hamilton and Smith have the dilemma of trying to ascertain how to regard their inventions, to which they have received patents. These patents apparently have been developed in cooperation between Texas A&M and Dow Corning. This problem has accelerated among scholars in recent years as potentially profitable advances emanating from joint academic and commercial inquiries become property. As such techniques involved become limited in their application and they then are controlled by licencees or by other agency. It is clear that Hamilton and Smith are not concerned with this aspect, rather with what they perceive as the limitations imposed by the peer review process. After some reflection I think that their allegation that preconceived ideas by other practitioners is blocking presentation of their ideas is unfortunate, but not uncommon in both business and science. Certainly it is typical in the examples given by Kuhn in his The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). I wrote a long piece on peer review for the DistList (Conservation DistList Instance 14:2 Distributed: Thursday, June 29, 2000 Message Id: cdl-14-2-002) and have published a letter or two in the AIC newsletter mentioning problems I see with it. Nature magazine has published a couple of interesting summaries (21 Oct. 1999). The AAAS Observer (7 July 1989) discussed how papers are chosen for publication in science by Daniel Koshland, and examples of plagiarism are found now and then (Science, vol. 245, 14 July 1989:120-2). Nature proposed some changes in the process in March of this year (v. 416 pp 258-260) but the essence of the problem lies often in the fact described by Kuhn, people not only are loath to change their minds, they want to give money and jobs to people they know and like, rather than someone with a good idea or for that matter a good paper. I worked in one museum and was on an affirmative action committee for several years and was surprised by how far some people would go to justify hiring someone they or a friend knew rather than to go outside and do a real search. This is human, I guess, the known quantity and all that, but it does undermine the idea that we live in a work that values merit. So my only real answer to the question is that you must do what Kuhn's examples did, try and try again, publish in whatever venue you can and be prepared to suffer the consequences of your convictions. In other words, good luck! Niccolo Caldararo Director and Chief Conservator Conservation Art Service *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:14 Distributed: Wednesday, August 28, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-14-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 27 August, 2002