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The British Food Journal Volume 61 Issue 11 1959

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 1 November 1959

27

Abstract

This is the age of research. What was once a highly selective privilege in just a few professions that could be counted on one's fingers has since the last war become a feature of every conceivable branch of science and trade, to which millions in money are devoted. The connection often seems remote, if not a little spurious. Perhaps it may be due to the enormous emphasis on the teaching of science and technology in recent years, but we see what Sir William Dale calls “these turnspits of modern science” ready to undertake, and various official bodies to finance by grants, research into almost anything. The amount spent, for example, on cancer research through the years and all over the world, which incidentally has produced very little in the way of real advancement towards a cure, must be phenomenal, but it is now probably dwarfed by the colossal sums available for trade and market research. We even see research by opposing groups, one endeavouring to prove, the other to refute some particular hypothesis. Much of it appears to lack realism or to be of any great practical value and at too high a theoretical level, including masses of statistics, without which the younger generation of scientists appears to think research valueless, if not impossible.

Citation

(1959), "The British Food Journal Volume 61 Issue 11 1959", British Food Journal, Vol. 61 No. 11, pp. 129-140. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011572

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1959, MCB UP Limited

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