I always get rather suspicious when people start talking about papers 
being unsuitable to publish because of their content. Research should 
not just tell you what everyone knows anyway, but well constructed 
research should have place even when the findings are controversial. 
Stevan used the example of race and IQ in the lecture. Surely even if 
strong evidence is found of differences in IQ between races, such a 
finding could be put to good use by people other than the BNP. It 
could be used in assessing the usefulness of educational initatives 
aimed at ethnic minorities, for example.
Similarly research of sexual coercion and rape should not be held 
back simply because it might not be politically correct. If people 
are researching this topic, it shows there's an interest in this 
topic. 
I believe that great care needs to be taken when controversial 
research is suppressed. After all, many scientific discoveries came 
from controversial research, e.g. the planets orbit round the sun, 
not the sun.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Tue Feb 13 2001 - 16:23:16 GMT