Hyde, Byron Vincent Emory (2024) Rethinking Conflicts of Interest. MA by research thesis, University of Leeds.
Abstract
This study argues from the literature on values for the existence of intellectual conflicts of interest, and proposes ideological transparency as the beginning of a policy solution. The first part shows that objectivity is a scientific virtue insofar as being objective results in better science, and that it is this scientific interest in objectivity that researchers’ ideological interests can clash with. The nature of this clash is examined and it is shown that there is no connexion between the size of an ideology and how much of a threat it poses to scientific objectivity. The second part of this study argues that conflicts of interest, especially intellectual ones, ought to be mitigated rather than eliminated, and that ideological transparency is the beginning of a mitigatory solution insofar as open science is safer from ideological bias. It is recognized that ideological transparency is imperfect, but that most of its imperfections apply to existing policies on the disclosure of financial conflicts of interest, and thus it is argued that ideological disclosure is at least as necessary as financial disclosure because researchers’ ideological interests can bias science in the same way as their financial ones can. These problems are, therefore, mostly dismissed, but one particular problem with open science that this study does seek to answer is in the production of a transparency paradox, whereby transparency both increases and decreases trust in science. The solution to the transparency paradox advanced here is that science educators and communicators need to educate the public about conflicts of interests – in particular, that all researchers have intellectual interests and that science is still trustworthy despite them. Conflicts of interest need to be rethought not only by metascientists and policymakers, but by everyone that interacts with science. The study concludes with some open questions to be investigated by policymakers and scientists of science policy about how ideological transparency might be operationalized in the future as a scientific policy.
Metadata
Supervisors: | Beebee, Helen and Saatsi, Juha |
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Keywords: | objectivity, transparency, ideology, values in science, scientific policy, research ethics, scientific method, scientific virtues |
Awarding institution: | University of Leeds |
Academic Units: | The University of Leeds > Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Cultures (Leeds) > School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of Science |
Depositing User: | Byron Hyde |
Date Deposited: | 20 Aug 2025 09:35 |
Last Modified: | 20 Aug 2025 09:35 |
Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:36851 |
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