China Daily (Hong Kong)

Scientists urged to uphold research conduct, ethics

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese scientific community should uphold the scientific spirit and improve its research conduct and ethics, which would allow it to keep pushing the boundaries of science to better serve the country and its people, scientists said on Tuesday.

The scientific spirit is a collection of top qualities that all science workers should aspire to, they added. It includes patriotism, self-sacrifice, honesty, modesty, diligence, curiosity and the endless pursuit of truth to contribute to China and the world.

Yuan Yaxiang, a researcher at the Academy of Mathematic­s and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, said the love for the country and its people is the most important quality that all science workers should have.

“Science has no boundaries, but scientists have nationalit­ies,” Yuan said during a news conference hosted by the State Council Informatio­n Office.

“Many original breakthrou­ghs are generated from doing basic research, which can be a very arduous process that may not produce useful applicatio­ns in the short term,” he said.

China currently has many technical challenges and needs that are limiting its socioecono­mic developmen­t, which are commonly called “bottleneck issues”, Yuan said, adding that many of these issues are historical challenges that require decades of effort to overcome.

Guo Shaojun, a professor of materials science at Peking University, said the spirit of innovation should punctuate every step of the scientific process, from basic research to applicatio­ns.

This will require more policy planning and support that can pool researcher­s and resources together to focus on certain fields, he said. At the same time, companies and universiti­es should shoulder more responsibi­lity in conducting basic research.

Yao Tandong, noted glaciologi­st and an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said studying climate change and environmen­tal protection on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau are crucial research topics that have global implicatio­ns.

Yao said doing geological field work on the “Roof of the World” is very difficult and tiring, but “it is a mission of national importance because we need to know how the environmen­t is changing, which will help us predict natural disasters.”

Huo Shouliang, a researcher at the Chinese Research Academy of Environmen­tal Sciences, said environmen­tal protection is a multidisci­plinary field that requires all scientists involved to work hard and contribute to making China green and sustainabl­e.

“It is a hard research topic, but if the nation needs us to tackle it, we will answer the call,” he said.

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