| I
would urge you to set aside perhaps a billion dollars to fund new fellowships
for graduate students from predominantly Islamic countries to come and
study science (broadly construed) in the United States.
Rodney
Brooks
Dear President
Bush,
Science
and the technology that flows from it have been great strengths of the
United States; without them the US would not be the single superpower
that it is today in the world.
For the
last fifty years that science has been carried out largely in the open
and has been shared with the rest of the world. That sharing has been
a source of great strength. The US graduate education system is the
strongest in the world and many international leaders have had some
of their training in our Universities. The openness and the way in which
our universities have been run as meritocracies, not places where national
origin or religion is considered in evaluating one's work, has attracted
waves of immigration of great scientists and engineers to this country.
There
is a place for classified and restricted research but it is mostly in
areas that are close to application, not in fundamental scientific and
engineering questions. The place for that research is not at our universities. The great universities of the US should remain as open arenas for all
areas of research where they act as an engine of creativity that feeds
the scientific needs of the US and the world.
As science
advisor I would urge you to continue, and strengthen, this policy of
openness. I would urge you to set aside perhaps a billion dollars to
fund new fellowships for graduate students from predominantly Islamic
countries to come and study science (broadly construed) in the United
States. I would urge you to direct the INS to treat foreign students
as welcome guests rather than suspected criminals who must be monitored
constantly by their host universities, and who are to be arrested, as
has recently happened, when the courses they end up taking at a respected
first rate university do not match some preconceived plan.
To reach
out this generous hand to aspiring young students would be courageous
in the current domestic climate of fear. But the long term payoff for
the United States will be immense. It will create long term personal
links between people in the countries we currently most fear and our
own country. Based on past experience we can predict that many of those
people will rise to positions of leadership and authority within their
countries. In the shorter term it will be an act of generosity rather
than aggression, and one can hope that it will have positive effects
in the way the US is viewed. Besides that we will gain access to a large
number of very smart, very driven, young minds who will help us and
the world in making scientific progress.
Once I
have convinced you to follow this advice I will get to work on some
more radical ideas which involve funding science that is deep and curiosity
driven, rather than dressed up as responding to politically justifiable
immediate needs. Such science has been the well spring of the great
advances throughout history.
Rodney
Brooks
Director of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab
Author of Flesh and Machines: How Robots will Change Us
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