Whatever happened to the CUDOS of academic values?

Over the past century, capitalism, relativism, egoism and social advocacy have fuelled the decay of traditional academic commitments, says Bruce Macfarlane

September 25, 2023
Rotten tomatoes
Source: iStock

Back in 1942, the American sociologist Robert Merton set out a series of values that, in his view, represented what it means to be a good academic. These norms – communism, universalism, disinterestedness and organised scepticism – are widely known by the acronym CUDOS.

The word communism carried a lot of radical chic in the 1930s and ’40s, but Merton was really referring to the essentially liberal ideal of freely sharing ideas, discoveries and materials in the best interests of scientific advance, rather than anything overtly political.

Universalism implied that academics should pursue the truth uninhibited by racially divisive policies, such as those that Nazi Germany had institutionalised in the 1930s, while disinterestedness meant disentangling emotion and personal interests from research. Finally, Merton argued that it was crucial that academics scrutinised all beliefs and claims, however sacred, calling this idea organised scepticism.

Eighty years on, commitment to CUDOS among academics remains strong. But a very different institutional ethos has taken hold in universities around the world. And while Merton feared the way in which the totalitarian state threatened CUDOS, its modern corruption has been led as much by the university itself as by illiberal governments or other external forces.

Communism has been converted into capitalism. Universities actively encourage academics to monetise their ideas and discoveries rather than sharing them for public benefit. Phrases like “applied research” and “knowledge transfer” have taken a firm hold.

Nor is it any longer politically correct for an academic to say that they are pursuing a universal truth. The triumph of cultural relativism means that it is only acceptable, especially for social scientists, to qualify everything in terms of differentialism. Virtue signalling the context-laden nature of any knowledge claim is essential to avoid accusations of essentialism or post-colonial arrogance.

Then there is the displacement of disinterestedness with egoism. Boastfulness has become an academic virtue and many universities around the world have fallen under the spell of bibliometrics, encouraging their academics to represent their work as a series of proxy boasts about the size of their h-index, citation count and the impact factors of the journals they publish in.

Indeed, bibliometrics have become so powerfully seductive that many academics now seem either unwilling or unable to articulate what contribution to knowledge they are making. As egoism takes over the collective academic psyche, especially where I work in Hong Kong, we are losing touch with what is really important.

As for organised scepticism, even this enlightenment virtue is being turned on its head as universities replace a commitment to critically interrogating knowledge claims with social advocacy. The trend for large-scale interdisciplinarity has been hijacked as a marketing tool for universities to brag about their achievements in addressing the world’s problems. Not every academic wants to be an activist for global social change even though there is a place for individual activism. Sanctifying such an agenda as a piece of corporate branding poses serious risks for the historic role of the university as society’s interrogator-in-chief.

If we take a slight liberty in moving around the order of the initials of differentialism, egoism and capitalism and use both the first and last letter of advocacy, we get DECAY, an apt acronym to represent the degeneration of CUDOS.

 

 

Many academics now find themselves, like the Roman god Janus, facing two ways at the same time. They still believe in CUDOS, but they need to practise a wholly contradictory and corrosive ethos (DECAY) in order to make and sustain a successful career.

It is important to challenge and resist the perverse virtues of DECAY wherever possible. A glimmer of hope is represented by initiatives such as the Leiden manifesto and the Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) which oppose the use of journal impact factors in research evaluation. Enlightened universities have signed up to such accords, but they cut little ice in East Asia.

Until this attitude changes, true academic values will continue to be corroded by the very institutions that ought to be championing them.

Bruce Macfarlane is chair professor of educational leadership at the Education University of Hong Kong. His paper, The DECAY of Merton’s scientific norms and the new academic ethos is published by Oxford Review of Education. 

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Related articles

In our market-driven world, in which the ideals of common good are disappearing, Fred Inglis reminds us that it is the public universities that are in a pivotal position to protect our society

14 March

Reader's comments (5)

ALL OF THESE CURRENTS WERE PRESENT IN UNIVERSITIES IN THE 2ND HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY! WE NEED HISTORICAL CONTEXT AND HISTORICAL UNDERSTANDING URGENTLY
Very good piece. Academic institutions are losing their legitimacy amongst academics and students, as well as the general population for different reasons. Something like this needs taking very seriously. University management should be pushing hard to do this, rather than defending governments, or pushing marketisation, impact, etc. They should be defending academic values against populism and ignorance, but do they even remember them?
Of the CUDOS virtues, if say one is undesirable, and another desirable bit impossible to achieve. The impossible is disinterestedness. It is impossible to be completely disinterested when your life or wellbeing, or that of your loved ones, depends on a particular outcome. Any scholar is claims to be completely disinterested is either lying (probably to themselves) or so privileged that they believe nothing can affect them (which amounts to the same thing - an interest the status quo which they believe can't change). Universalism is undesirable. Even in subjects such as physics , which might be seen as the most objective of disciplines, it is some times best to regard light as a wave and sometimes as a particle. Both are true in their proper frameworks. Ditto quantum vs the standard model. String theory is famous for being "not even wrong" as its structures are so flexible that they can encompass almost any truth, but perhaps that is is strength. Better to think of it as a framework for thinking than an expression of a single truth. What is true in physics is doubly true in biology or psychology, without even thinking about social sciences.
An excellent piece. It’s true that CUDOS never reigned supreme historically, but it is undoubtedly true that most of its elements have been seriously eroded over the past several decades in the US and the UK especially. This is true even in some areas of natural science, but it is even more true in the humanities and the social sciences. Furthermore, while the causes of this are to a large degree external to universities, as Macfarlane points out there are internal sources as well. These certainly include some of the policies of university managements. But it is also necessary to point out that many scholars in the humanities and the social sciences today reject UDOS, even if they do not abandon Communism.
One can blame managerialism for starting the decline but rent-seeking academics who benefit from this system have a lot to answer for.

Sponsored