sir peter medawar science, creativity and the popularization of karl popper

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SIR PETER MEDAWAR: SCIENCE, CREATIVITYAND THE POPULARIZATION OF KARL POPPER by NEIL CALVER* Centre for the History of the Sciences, School of History, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NX, UK Sir Peter Medawar was respected by scientists and literati alike. It was perhaps not surprising, then, that he would choose to involve himself in the ‘two cultures’ debate of 1959 and beyond. The focus of his intervention was the philosophy of Sir Karl Popper. However, Medawar’s Popper was not the guru of falsification familiar from philosophy textbooks. Medawar’s distinctive interpretation of Popper treated him instead as the source of insights into the role of creativity and imagination in scientific inquiry. This paper traces the context for Medawar’s adoption of Popperian philosophy, together with its application before the debate. It then examines, within the context of the debate itself, the way in which Medawar attempted to reconcile scientific inquiry with literary practice. Medawar became increasingly convinced that not only was induction epistemologically unsound, but it was also damaging to the public role of the scientist. His construction of Popperianism would, he envisaged, provide a worthy alternative for scientists’ self-image. Keywords: science; history; twentieth century Sir Peter Medawar (1915–87) ( figure 1), by any reckoning, had it all: a professorship in his thirties, and Fellowship of the Royal Society and the ultimate accolade, Nobel laureate, while still in his forties. Headship of the Medical Research Council swiftly followed this, together with the Presidency of the British Association. 1 However, he suffered a debilitating stroke while giving his Presidential Address to the Association in 1969, leading to a long period of convalescence that prevented him from taking up the presidency of the Royal Society in 1970. 2 Nevertheless, Medawar’s stoicism and refusal to allow his subsequent disabilities to detract from his intellectual abilities only added to his standing. 3 He had other attributes. One, for instance, was recorded by The Times in 1982. Its then Literary Editor spoke of how those who could write clearly and elegantly about science for the unscientific but intelligent lay reader could be counted on the fingers of one hand—Medawar being one of this rare breed. 4 Such an accolade was typical of those conferred on Medawar’s 30-year quest (1957–87) to speak for, as well as of, science. 5 Medawar was reckoned to be the kind of scientist who got science a good name. 6 With a style combining the pungency of Thomas Huxley and the throwaway impatience of *[email protected] Notes Rec. R. Soc. (2013) 67, 301–314 doi:10.1098/rsnr.2013.0022 Published online 22 May 2013 301 q 2013 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. on March 29, 2015 http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/ Downloaded from

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Sir Peter Medawar Science, Creativity and the Popularization of Karl Popper

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  • of ins aper

    with the Presidency of the British Association.1 However, he suffered a debilitating stroke

    wh d

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    in nt

    dis

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    Li e

    for e

    handMedawar being one of this rare breed.4 Such an accolade was typical of those

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    sty of

    *[email protected]

    Notes Rec. R. Soc. (2013) 67, 301314

    doi:10.1098/rsnr.2013.0022

    Published online 22 May 2013

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from nferred on Medawars 30-year quest (195787) to speak for, as well as of, science

    edawar was reckoned to be the kind of scientist who got science a good name.6 With

    le combining the pungency of Thomas Huxley and the throwaway impatienceile giving his Presidential Address to the Association in 1969, leading to a long perio

    convalescence that prevented him from taking up the presidency of the Royal Socie

    1970.2 Nevertheless, Medawars stoicism and refusal to allow his subseque

    abilities to detract from his intellectual abilities only added to his standing.3

    He had other attributes. One, for instance, was recorded by The Times in 1982. Its the

    terary Editor spoke of how those who could write clearly and elegantly about scienc

    the unscientific but intelligent lay reader could be counted on the fingers of ontraces the context for Medawars adoption of Popperian philosophy, together with its

    application before the debate. It then examines, within the context of the debate itself, the

    way in which Medawar attempted to reconcile scientific inquiry with literary practice.

    Medawar became increasingly convinced that not only was induction epistemologically

    unsound, but it was also damaging to the public role of the scientist. His construction of

    Popperianism would, he envisaged, provide a worthy alternative for scientists self-image.

    Keywords: science; history; twentieth century

    Sir Peter Medawar (191587) (figure 1), by any reckoning, had it all: a professorship in his

    thirties, and Fellowship of the Royal Society and the ultimate accolade, Nobel laureate, while

    still in his forties. Headship of the Medical Research Council swiftly followed this, togetheroks. Medawars distinctive interpretation of Popper treated him instead as the so

    ights into the role of creativity and imagination in scientific inquiry. This pSIR PETER MEDAWAR: SCIENCE, CREATIVITY AND THE POPULARIZATION

    OF KARL POPPER

    by

    NEIL CALVER*

    Centre for the History of the Sciences, School of History, University of Kent,

    Canterbury CT2 7NX, UK

    Sir Peter Medawar was respected by scientists and literati alike. It was perhaps not

    surprising, then, that he would choose to involve himself in the two cultures debate of

    1959 and beyond. The focus of his intervention was the philosophy of Sir Karl Popper.

    However, Medawars Popper was not the guru of falsification familiar from philosophy

    textbo urce301 q 2013 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society.

  • N. Calver302

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from J. B. S

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    Figure. Haldane, he was deemed to be in the same class as Julian Huxley.7 Richard Dawkins,

    f the very few practising scientists on whom our Literary Editor could apparently rely,

    ed Medawar in 1983 to be the chief spokesman for the scientist in the modern world.

    him if you are a scientist and, especially, he suggested, read him if you are not; he was

    doubt that Medawar, during the course of the twentieth century, had no equal as a

    of scientific literature.8 Formal recognition for Medawar came in 1987 with the

    rral of the Royal Societys Michael Faraday Prize for excellence in communicating

    e. The Society wrote that the award was

    For the contribution his books had made in presenting to the public, and to scientists

    themselves, the intellectual nature and the essential humanity of pursuing science at the

    highest level and the part it played in our modern culture.9

    t surprisingly, perhaps, Medawar was judged not only to have infused real meaning

    he concept of renaissance man but also to have had significance in C. P. Snows

    about the two cultures.10 For scientists, he provided excellent reading for the two

    es and something to put on to the scales of public opinion to counterbalance the

    y propagated image of the modern scientist as a Dr Strangelove figure.11The Times

    oved to concede:

    1. Image of Sir Peter Medawar taken from his biographical memoir66 (Copyright q Godfrey Argent Studio;reproduced with permission.)

  • Meda hical

    discip ffield

    Found r his

    retirem who

    conce the

    every eply

    attribu ome

    slowly

    Ho elf as

    Sir Peter Medawar 303

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from knowledge; Sir Peter is oblivious to it all, standing guard with his sword drawn on that

    frontier between science and non-science which his discovery of Karl Popper seems

    to have revealed to him once and for all in some formative philosophical experience of

    the 1950s.20an extremely influential chief spokesman for Popperianism. When it was published in

    1959, Poppers Logic of scientific discovery was greeted with some indifference by the

    British scientific community.17 Nevertheless, it was Medawar who would make a significant

    difference to Poppers popularity among a broad range of audiences. Indeed, up until his

    death in 1987, scientists and the public alike noted his uncanny ability to capture the

    essence of Poppers ideas in a few short lines. Many held Medawar to be the first to enable

    scientists who considered that process matters but did not have the stomach for

    philosophical writings to appreciate what Popper had to say in a way that struck a chord

    with them.18 In 1983 Richard Dawkins summarized Medawars contribution to the

    Popperian cause as this:

    Part of the appeal was that Medawar was not only a Nobel Laureate, but he seemed like a

    Nobel Laureate; he was everything one thought a Nobel Laureate ought to be. If you have

    ever wondered why scientists like Popper, try Medawars exposition. Actually most

    Popperian scientists have probably never tried reading anything but Medawars

    exposition.19

    There were those, however, who thought that although the relationship between Medawar

    and Popper was mutually beneficial, Medawars praise for the latter lacked insight and scope.

    With a dash of cynicism, conceivably, Steven Rose described their association in these terms

    for The New Statesman:

    Medawar has not found it necessary to shift his broader philosophical framework a

    millimetre. Science may have transformed its institutional relationship with the State, been

    subject to radical critique as an agent of social repression and had its methodological

    underpinnings hacked away in the aftermath of Kuhn, Feyerabend and the sociology ofption of the scientific process: that it can be seen to hold good, to work in

    day affairs of the laboratory. He concluded that a share of his success was de

    table to Popper, and that this share will grow larger as your conceptions bec

    assimilated to the body of received thought.15

    wever, Medawar developed from being a disciple of Poppers to establishing hims16regarded Popper as the leading philosopher of his time and the only methodologist of

    science whose interpretation of the scientific process was simultaneously illuminating,

    realistic and practically helpful.14 And indeed it was useful: on receiving his Nobel Prize

    in 1960, Medawar wrote, how very deeply I have been influenced by you [Popper] in

    immeasurable, practical ways. This was, he continued, the great power of yourI am ashamed to say that C. P. Snows two cultures debate smoulders away. It is an

    embarrassing and sterile debate, but at least it introduced us to Medawars essays.

    Afterwards, not even the most bigoted aesthete doubted that a scientist could be every

    inch as cultivated and intellectually endowed as a student of the humanities.12

    war was, secondly, acknowledged as Sir Karl Poppers most high-profile philosop

    le within the field of active science.13 In pursuit of a grant from the Nu

    ation allowing Popper to further his research and subsequent publications afte

    ent in September 1969, Medawar considered himself to be one of those

  • the R 22 It

    was n

    criticism and refutation of the opinions of such well-known sacred cows of western26

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    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from thought such as Plato and Marx. Nevertheless, Poppers vision of an open society, as

    Medawar read it, was a society in which criticism and political dissent were not merely

    permitted but were actually made use of for social and political improvement. It was also

    a society in which human nature, far from being confined to one politically acceptable

    stereotype, could flourish in all its remarkable diversity. Only an open society set free

    the critical powers of humanity. In short, the open society was one as far as possible

    removed from that which he associated with Nazi Germany. Medawar perceived that the

    philosophical approach of Ayer and the logical positivists, because of their insistence on

    the primacy of logical reasoning, meant that they would never be able to fully address the

    realities of human experience. Popper, however, was different. Medawar judged that his

    philosophical approach to the problems of social organizationthe government wouldrevolutionaries of logical positivism, the views of men such as Carnap, Schlick,

    Neurath, and Reichenbach. It was impossible not to be enthused and carried along by

    this exciting new movement.23

    Medawar later came to hold a more sceptical view of this philosophical revolution.

    This was largely due to the timing of his introduction to Popperian philosophy: the

    publication in 1945 of The open society and its enemies24it being, self-confessedly,

    Poppers war work.25 Medawar seized on this very long, grave, intensely dramatic and,

    in some ways, rather shocking book: dramatic, because of the importance and intellectual

    strength of its arguments; shocking, because much of the exposition turned on themplating tomatoes through blue spectacles and reporting on what they found,

    ight and the Good were the subjects of lengthy and inconclusive deliberations.

    ot until he had graduated that

    A young teacher in Christ Church wrote a bestseller that was read with breathless

    excitement by every student of philosophy in Oxford: A. J. Ayers Language, Truth

    and Logic, a dazzling and revolutionary work which made known to English-speaking

    readers for the first time the thoughts of the Vienna Circle, comprising theThe substance of this quotation is open to examination. It is arguableas set out below

    that Medawars thinking did in fact evolve, not least in his reorientation of Popperianism

    within the context of the two cultures debate. On one level he attempted to harness a

    level of understanding between scientists and humanists, and on a second level he

    made an effort to raise the imaginative faculty of scientists in the public sphere. Thus,

    he attempted to eliminate induction from scientific inquiry, while simultaneously raising

    the public profile of the scientist. Medawars position on Kuhn is not wholly relevant

    to this article, but nonetheless there is evidence that he highlighted the greater

    relevance of Popperian philosophy to the working scientist.21 And last, in terms of the

    chronology of the evolution of Medawars thinking, we shall see that this can be traced

    back to the 1930s.

    RECOGNIZING POPPERS WORTH

    After enduring what he has referred to as four disagreeable years at Marlborough, Medawar

    went up to Oxford in 1932. There he found the philosophical tutorials very much to his taste.

    In general, though, Medawar considered British philosophy to be in rather a bad way in

    those days. Looking back, he recorded in his memoir that epistemologists were gravely

    conte and

  • Sir Peter Medawar 305

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from have a policy about how any aspect of society would be organized, but it also needed to be

    open to reviewing that policy in light of its effectswould have a formative role in public

    debates over the future of civilization.27

    In 1946 Medawar invited Popper to the Theoretical Biology Club at Oxford.28 During their

    ensuing conversations, Medawar was struck by the common element that he perceived to

    pervade the whole of Poppers philosophy: recognition that human designs and human

    schemes of thought are very often mistaken and that the safest way to proceed is to identify

    and learn from mistakes. For instance, there wasas demonstrated by Marxist scientists

    such as J. D. Bernal29a widespread belief and hope that it would be possible to recognize

    and propound laws of the historic process and of social transformationin effect, laws of

    historical destinythat would have the same predictive value as the laws of the natural

    sciences. For beliefs of this general kind, Popper coined the word historicism.30 In a series

    of papers published in Economica in 194431 entitled The poverty of historicismlater

    incorporated into The open society and its enemiesPopper had argued that historicism

    was without logical foundation. Medawar judged that Poppers position in the social

    sciences could therefore be said to be analogous to that of David Humes in the natural

    sciences.32 For Hume had caused a similar upheaval of conventional thought when, as

    Medawar saw it, he destroyed the foundations of induction, arguing that it was based not on

    logical reasoning but upon faithupon a mere habit of expectation.33

    Moreover, Medawar agreed with Poppers view that much elseepistemologicallywas

    wrong with induction. The term induction was being used with reference to any scheme

    of thought that purported to show that general statements can be compounded of particular

    observation-statements. Defined thus, Medawar and Popper considered that induction had no

    explanation to offer for two very familiar elements in scientific thought and discovery: error

    and luckfor why would a scientist ever fall into error if they were to observe things

    correctly and operate a calculus such as John Stuart Mills, according to the rules? As to

    luck, something applicable to all scientists, how could the scientist know he is being lucky

    except in terms of the fulfilment of some specific prior expectation? Medawar would never

    cease to refer to Mill in similarly unflattering terms, as the high priest of induction.34

    Medawars understanding of Popperian philosophy broadened and deepened to embrace his

    view that the generative act in scientific discovery, or for that matter in the solution of any

    given social problem, is the formulation of a hypothesis, the imaginative conjecture of what

    the world might be. Thus Medawar saw that what was being tested in an experiment were

    the logical implications and consequences of accepting the hypothesis. A well-designed and

    technically successful experiment would thus yield results of two kinds: the experimental

    results might square with the hypothesis, or they might be inconsistent with it. If the results

    were to square with the implications of the hypothesis, the scientist could take heart and

    begin to hope that they were thinking on the right lines. In this case, they would then

    expose the hypothesis to still more exacting experimental tests. But no matter how often the

    hypothesis were to be confirmed, it might conceivably be supplanted by a different

    hypothesis later on.35 Medawar was nothing if not a quick learner. When elected to the

    Royal Society in 1949, he wrote that, although he had done so before, he was pleased again

    to record his gratitude for the guidance that Popper had provided in the formulation of his

    experiments. In fact, Popper was entitled to a cut of the credit for his election.36

    Medawar became reacquainted with A. J. Ayer at the launch of the latters founding of the

    Metalogical Society, also in 1949; Ayers Society had the object of getting philosophers and

    scientists to meet and discuss the problems that they felt had implications for, or relevance to,

  • and v and

    metho and

    Meda f the

    traditi first

    inspiring scientific inquiry. Popper, instead, was the first to provide an exciting theory of the39

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    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from process of scientific discovery. Drawing on his experience at Ayers Metalogical Society,

    Medawar foresaw a time when working scientists and philosophers alike would come to

    regard Poppers as the most searching, revealing and ultimately rewarding analysis of the

    problem yet undertaken. It is clear that Medawar was now speaking with the authority of an

    institutionally recognized scientist, specifically seeking to sway opinion towards the bright

    lights of Popperianism. The rather general promulgation of its virtues, though, would change

    in the light of the two cultures.

    THE TWO CULTURES

    Medawars appeal beyond the scientific world gave him almost unrivalled gravitas with

    which to intervene in the two cultures debate. C. P. Snow was a particular admirer,

    judging that throughout the 1960s Medawar had been able to revolutionize old-fashioned

    concepts of science.40 His starting point was that where there should be cooperation there

    was instead estrangement. In the 1960s it seemed that the sciences and the humanities

    had been

    separated by a great sheet of half-silvered glass, a mirror through which it is possible to

    see in one direction only. The people on the literary-cultural side are fully absorbed in

    their own antics and their own reflections. They have not even a rudimentary grasp

    about what is going on on the other side.41

    Medawar would, on occasions, cite Aldous Huxleys plea: Let us advance together, men

    of letters and men of science.42 Such an ambition would, however, only be achieved if

    scientists and literati were made aware of each others methods and energizing concepts,

    and the quality and pattern of movement of each others thoughts. Medawar therefore set

    out the argument that imagination and criticism are the fundamental components ofsemi-public Popperian promulgation. He had succeeded in highlighting to other scientists

    the philosophically unsound nature of induction and, by consequence, its untenable

    position within their practice.37

    It was with his Reith Lectures of 1959 that Medawar came into the wider public

    consciousness, affording him the opportunity to promote Popperianism.38 He hailed Poppers

    Logic of scientific discoverypublished in English in the same yearas one of the most

    important documents of the twentieth century. Inductive accounts, he claimed to the readers

    of New Scientist, had the character of a logical autopsydissections of the finished

    product of scientific activity. The inference was clear: this was not exactly a recipe forice versa, and the scientists tended not to recognize as their own the aims

    ds that the philosophers attributed to them. That said, with both Popper

    war pointing out its deficiencies, there emerged a consensus around the denial o

    onal theory of induction. This was to be an important moment: Medawarsor perhaps even solutions in, each others fields. Among the scientist members were J. Z.

    Young FRS, Lionel Penrose (elected FRS in 1953) and Medawar. Aside from Ayer, the

    philosophers present included Popper, Humphrey Slaterwho had edited Polemicand

    Bertrand Russell FRS. However, as one participant noted, the influence of the Society

    eventually faded out because of a general failure of communication between philosophers

    and scientists. Problems that worried the philosophers often left the scientists unmoved,

  • Sir Peter Medawar 307

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from scientific inquiry in the very same way in which they pervade literary practice. But in making

    such a case, a historical analysis was also provided. Thus Medawar was addressing the

    question of why the perception may have arisen that science and the arts were so distinct.

    The official view of the nineteenth-century Romantics was, Medawar argued, that reason

    and imagination were antitheticalor, at best, that they provided alternative pathways to the

    truth: the pathway of Reason being long and winding and stopping short of the summit, so

    that while Reason is breathing heavily there is Imagination capering lightly up the hill.43

    This was, he pointed out, the view of Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth and Coleridge. It was

    also the view of William Blake, who came in the grandeur of Inspiration to cast off

    Rational Demonstration . . . to cast off Bacon, Locke and Newton.44 I will not Reasonand Comparemy business is to create.45

    Such a view was not only prevalent among Romantic poets. The role of creativity,

    Medawar added, had been misrepresented by influential figures within science: William

    Whewell had referred to good hypotheses as happy guesses.46 A philosopher of the

    stature of Bertrand Russell had, unfortunately, once referred to hypotheses as a mere

    method of making plausible guesses.47 The word mere offered the impression that little

    value should be given to them. It was Newtons view, however, that stood out most. This

    rested on the wide misunderstanding of Newtons celebrated disclaimer Hypotheses non

    fingo48 (I feign no hypotheses), an abjuration widely taken to mean that Newton did

    not indulge in speculation. This, Medawar perceived, was a misrepresentation; what

    Newton intended to do was firmly and loftily to disassociate himself from philosophical

    romances such as Thomas Burnets Sacred Theory of the Earth.49

    Nevertheless, a case could be made, as Medawar phrased it, that the character and

    interaction of imagination and critical reasoning were common to the arts and science.

    What was more, imagination and critical reasoning were the fundamental principles of

    Poppers scientific methodology. For, as he saw it, all advances of scientific understanding

    begin with a speculative adventure, an imaginative preconception of what might be true, a

    Popperian conjecture. It constituted an invention of a possible world, or of a fraction of that

    world. The conjecture was then exposed to criticism to decipher whether or not that

    imagined world were anything like the real one. Scientific reasoning, as demonstrated by

    Popper, was therefore at all levels an interaction between two episodes of thoughta

    dialogue between two voices, the one imaginative and the other critical: a dialogue, as

    Medawar termed it, between the possible and the actual, between proposal and disposal,

    conjecture and criticism, between what might be true and what is in fact the case.50

    At another level, Medawar judged that it was because of inductivism, with its

    connotations of divisions of social class, that perceptions surrounding the two cultures

    had grown. It had spawned the erroneous belief that there was a great divide between

    creative thinkers, people like artists and poets and writers who worked through the

    imagination, and scientists who wereintellectually speakingmere collectors of facts.

    Induction, as Medawar saw it, had become sociologically toxic. Its enormous influence

    made it seem that scientists were doing no more than analysing and calculating, as

    opposed to those in the other culture, who indulged in more overtly imaginative activities.

    It was for this reason that Medawar determined it not unfair to trace induction to the

    origin of the dichotomy of loyalties that came to be associated with the two cultures

    debate. Poppers methodology had, moreover, the strength of completely abolishing such

    cultural distinctions. Both those in the humanities and those in the sciences could be seen

    to rely primarily on the imagination for the generation of ideas.51

  • messa ation

    of fac or to

    think iting

    explo

    provocative question in his oration Is the scientific paper a fraud?:

    I do not mean that the interpretations you find in a scientific paper are wrong or

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    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from deliberately mistaken. I mean the scientific paper may be a fraud because it

    misrepresents the processes of thought that accompanied or gave rise to the work that

    is described in the paper . . . The scientific paper in its orthodox form does embody atotally mistaken conception, even a travesty, of the nature of scientific thought.55

    Here was the fundamental point. Medawar went on to claim that most scientific papers,

    perhaps unconsciously, give the false impression that scientific discoveries merely arise

    from inductive observation. They do not make it clear that the essential mental process in

    research is the imaginative act, the formulation of a hypothesis to be tested later by

    experiments. There was, as one would come to expect, a championing of Popperian

    working scientists who were driven ever onwards by a dissatisfaction, a certain

    restlessness of mind, always driving the scientist on, telling him to try and devise theories

    to explain the strange events in the world about us.56

    Medawar was both surprised and pleased by the response to the programme. He felt that

    most listeners had agreed with the gist of his ideas, and that there had been a move away

    from the ideas of the inductive method.57 Indeed, Quintin Hogg, shortly to become

    Minister of State for Education and Science, was much swayed by the view of science

    that Medawar, and hence Popper, was advancing. He had long felt that the process ofGETTING THE MESSAGE ACROSS

    Medawar reckoned that the contemporary method of scientific communication was in need

    of revision. As things stood, it perpetuated the misleading impressions that he was seeking to

    address. After being contacted by David Edge, producer of the BBC Science Unit, Medawar

    agreed to give a talk that would form the introduction to a series called Experiment, which

    promised to give an insight into how scientists really discover things. Medawar raised age was, above all, that it was important to realize that science was not a compil

    ts, or a classified inventory of factual information. In fact, it was a vulgar err

    so. All scientists should be very conscious of being engaged in an exc

    ratory process.54Beyond the immediate necessities of the debate, Medawar was trying to harness Poppers

    reputation among working scientists while raising their public profile. Popperian imaginative

    or inspirational process enters into all scientific reasoning at whatever level: it is not confined

    to great discoveries, unlikeas Medawar termed itthe more simple-minded inductivists

    have supposed. Scientists should no longer be too proud or too shy to talk about creativity

    and creative imagination, feeling it to be incompatible with their conception of themselves as

    men of facts and rigorous inductive judgements.52 To those who considered that the idea

    that science was conjectural in character in some way diminished it and, by implication,

    those who practised it, Medawar retorted that nothing could be more diminishing than the

    idea that the scientist was the collector and classifier of fact: a man who cranks some

    well-oiled machine of discovery.53 Poppers conception of science was, instead, a

    liberating one; one that enlarged and was not diminished by the thought that any truth

    begins life as an imaginative preconception of what that truth might be. It put scientists

    on the same footing as all others who used the imaginative faculty. Thus Medawars

  • Poppers hypothetico-deductive method at work.64 Medawar drove home the point that

    the w odes

    of th e to

    recog s, in

    Meda ristic

    of mo that

    Sir Peter Medawar 309

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from any member of the general public who read this book with any kind of understanding

    would never again think of the scientist as merely operating the machine of discovery.

    Nobody starting out on their scientific career would henceforward believe that discovery

    would only come their way through the inductive process. Induction, he hoped, would

    become an irrelevance and a travesty of their style of thinking by working scientists

    themselves. The overall message was very clear: induction was the methodology of

    science that was incompatible with the idea that scientists exercised the creative faculty

    that was clearly exercised in the fine arts. By contrast, creativity occupied the central

    position in the Popperian scheme of thinking: an inspiration, a flash of insight.65hole discovery was due to the rapid alternation of imaginative and critical epis

    oughthere it could all be seen in motion, and every scientist would com

    nize the same intellectual structure in their own research. Watsons account wa

    wars judgement, characteristic of science at every level, and indeed characte

    st exploratory or investigative processes in everyday life. He was convincedscientific discovery was a subject on which something badly needed to be said.

    Furthermore, he said, I had modestly intended to have a go myself one day on these

    lines, but now I shall have either to abandon the attempt or concede your claims to

    priority.58 Moreover, Medawar had engaged his audience in a wider debate: The Times

    considered that if all future presenters could match Medawars elegant and incisive

    opening, we can gratefully forget about the two cultures for a bit.59

    Medawar did receive some criticism, particularly from scientists still wedded to the

    inductivist approach.60 To these critics he offered the views of Darwin himself, quoting

    what the great British naturalist had written to his friend Henry Fawcett:

    About thirty years ago there was much talk that geologists ought only to observe and not

    theorise; and I well remember some one saying that at this rate a man might as well go

    into a gravel-pit and count the pebbles and describe the colours. How odd it is that

    anyone should not see that all observation must be for or against some view if it is to

    be of any service!61

    There was, however, a golden opportunity to showcase the benefits of Poppers

    philosophy within scientific discoveries. James Watsons book The Double Helix, telling

    the story of the discovery in Cambridge of the structure of DNA with Francis Crick, was

    published in 1968. Medawar and the sociologist of science Robert Merton, almost alone

    among a host of reviewers, immediately established a sociological and philosophical

    importance in the Watsons book.62 Merton found that because Watson was telling it like

    it was, the book was an important contribution to scientific historiography. The public

    record of science, in Mertons judgement, tended to produce a mythical imagery of

    scientific work, in which disembodied intellects move towards discovery by inexorably

    logical steps, actuated all the while only by the aim to advance knowledge. Watson, by

    contrast, had set this record straight, in showing a variety and confusion of motives, in

    which the objective of finding the structure of DNA was intertwined with the tormenting

    pleasures of competition, contest and reward.63

    Medawar endorsed all that Merton said. Moreover, he recast the whole book to behe

    hopedan authoritative and objective lesson in the nature of the Popperian creative

    process in science. He had every hope that it would become the standard case history of

  • unique relevance to contemporary culture, readily understood at all levels.

    the anonymous referees who commented on the paper.

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    1 Peter Brian Medawar was born in 1915 in Rio de Janeiro. His father, Nicholas Agnatius, was a

    Brazilian businessman of Lebanese extraction, and his mother, Edith Muriel Dowling, was

    British. He was educated at Marlborough College and Magdalen College, Oxford, where he

    obtained a first-class honours degree in zoology in 1936 and a DSc in 1947. At Oxford he

    was successively a Christopher Welch scholar and a senior-demi of Magdalen, a senior

    research fellow at St Johns, and a fellow by special election of Magdalen. From 1947 to

    1951 he was Mason Professor of Zoology in the University of Birmingham, from 1951 to

    1962 Jodrell Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in University College London,

    and from 1962 to 1971 Director of the National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill.

    From 1971 to 1986 he worked in the Medical Research Council Clinical Research Centre,

    Harrow. He was elected to the Royal Society in 1949; he was awarded a CBE in 1958, a

    knighthood in 1965, a CH in 1972, and an OM in 1981, as well as honorary degrees too

    numerous to mention. In 1960, together with Sir Frank MacFarlane Burnet, he received the

    Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery of immunological tolerance.

    2 The Wellcome Library, Private Papers of Sir Peter Medawar (hereafter PP/PBM/). In 1988Oxford University Press commissioned Dr Robert Reid to write Medawars biography. BothACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    A previous version of this paper was given at the The South East Hub conference at the

    University of Kent on 13 June 2012, and at the Science in Public conference at

    University College London, on 2021 July 2012. I am grateful to those who invited me

    to speak on those occasions, and to the members of the audience for their helpful

    comments. Charlotte Sleigh, Crosbie Smith and Simon Schaffer were very generous with

    their time and wisdom. Bryan Magee and Sir James Gowans provided key insights, as didThis paper has charted the progress of Sir Karl Poppers ideas within the English-

    speaking culture, in both the humanities and the sciences. It covers a period of little over

    20 years from Poppers arrival in England to take up his post at the London School of

    Economics in 1946. At this time his ideas were known only to a very small circle of

    dedicated philosophically minded scientists. By the end of these two decades, thanks to a

    very great extent to the championing of his ideas by Sir Peter Medawar, they became

    known to a much wider non-scientific audience. Moreover, they had caused many

    scientists to completely revise their understanding of the nature of the scientific process.

    In addition, Medawar had prompted wider audiences to revise their understanding of the

    historical nuances that had led to the creation of two cultures, pointing out that

    previously held social and cultural considerations and influences had been misplaced.

    Judged by sheer intellectual rigour alone, all scientists were Popperian, with those same

    creative and imaginative qualitiesthe relative juxtaposition of the sciences in relation to

    the humanities. Medawar came to this as a man of international distinction, one

    recognized by his position within the institutions of science. His vision and understanding

    of science, however, had a breadth, depth and clarity that accentuated the profound

    significance of Popperian thinking. Medawars uncanny ability to expound on it gave it a

  • Sir Alan Hodgkin and Sir Solly Zuckerman told Reid that Medawar was due to become President

    Sir Peter Medawar 311

    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from in 1970 (PP/PBM/MN.9 and PP/PBM/MT.19).3 Dr Reids interview with Sir Solly Zuckerman (PP/PBM/MT.19).4 The Times, 18 November 1982 (PP/PBM/D.26).5 Peter Medawar, Memoir of a thinking radish: an autobiography (Oxford University Press, 1986).

    6 Hugh Herbert, The thinking radish, Guardian, 17 May 1988 (PP/PBM/A.104).7 How the scientist ticks, Sunday Times (19 February 1967) (PP/PBM/D.10); Anthony Flew,

    Top of the class, review of Medawars The Hope of Progress, Times Educ. Suppl.

    (31 May 1976); A. H. Halsey, No more beyond, New Society (27 April 1972); H. J. Eysenck,

    The future and elsewhere, Spectator (16 March 1974). All express a similar opinion (PP/PBM/D.12).

    8 Richard Dawkins, The art of the developable, New York Rev. Books (October 1983) (PP/PBM/D.25); Dawkins to Lady Jean Medawar, 5 October 1987 (PP/PBM/A.98). NewScientist reckoned him to be perhaps the best science writer of his generation: Peter

    Medawar (obituary), New Scient. 116 (1581), 16 (1987) (PP/PBM/A.14). Otherdistinguished, high-profile scientistsSolly Zuckerman, Henry Dale, George Porter, Aaron

    Klug and Alan Hodgkin to name but a fewhave all spoken of Medawars uncanny ability

    to make that hardest of breakthroughs for science: to fully engage with those in the arts

    (PP/PBM/F.137).9 See http://royalsociety.org/awards/michael-faraday-prize/.10 Peter Paterson, Tribute to a brain of Britain, Daily Mail (17 May 1988) (PP/PBM/A.104).11 Psychological Medicine (February 1981) (PP/PBM/D.20).12 Patricia Morton, Three marriages in sharp focus, Daily Telegraph (17 May 1988). Similar

    sentiments are expressed in Words of hope, The Times (17 May 1988) (PP/PBM/A.104);Sir Edward Boyle, Books of the yeara personal choice, Observer (10 December 1967)

    (PP/PBM/D/10); Alex Comfort, Checking the story, Guardian (21 August 1969) (PP/PBM/D.12); idem, Toward the essential project, Guardian (13 April 1972) (PP/PBM/D.15).

    13 A view echoed in Bryan Magee, Popper (Fontana & Collins, London, 1973), p. 1.

    14 Medawar to Brian Young of the Nuffield Foundation, 13 June 1969 (PP/PBM/A.25). (Italicsmy own.)

    15 Courtesy of the archives at the London School of Economics (hereafter LSE/POPPER/).Medawar to Popper, 26 October 1960 (LSE/POPPER/325.26).

    16 David Hamilton, Peter Medawar and clinical transplantation, Immunol. Lett. 21, 913 (1989),

    at p. 10 (PP/PBM/A.9).17 Kurt Mendelssohn FRS, Science and logic, New Scient. 5 (121), 592 (1959).

    18 John Maddox, The art of the soluble, Nature 329, 472 (1987) (PP/PBM/F.47). Convertsincluded Sir Solly Zuckerman: Popper came to me with his biblealthough I didnt always

    manage my responses like a well-trained choir boy. I was particularly fascinated, therefore, by

    your analysis. Zuckerman to Medawar, 8 June 1968 (PP/PBM/D.9). Also, Sir John Maynard-Smith: He did make me interested in Popper. If I had to express my philosophy it would be

    akin to Popper and this is very largely due to Medawar. He got me reading Popper. I very

    much share Peters feelings about Popper. Conversation with Dr Robert Reid (PP/PBM/F.34).19 Dawkins, op. cit. (note 8).

    20 Steven Rose, The fashion in theories, New Statesman (February 1984) (PP/PBM/D.44).21 Adopting Kuhns terms of ordinary or normal science is, according to Medawar, relegating

    science for the most part to a matter of mundane puzzle-solving within the stifling framework

    of received opinionKuhns paradigms. It is only every so often, however, that the

    extraordinary happens: the prevailing orthodoxy is supplanted by a new equally suppressive

    orthodoxy that constitutes a new paradigm. In the light of other parallels of how Kuhn sees

    the scientific community on the analogy of a religious community and sees science as a

    scientists religion, Medawar seized on this opportunity. He suggested that the supplanting of

  • one paradigm by another might be thought of as a confused and anxious period marked by shrill

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    on March 29, 2015http://rsnr.royalsocietypublishing.org/Downloaded from cries of heresy and schism. In the real world, Popperian scientists construct their own paradigms

    in the form of their own opinionsand do not cling to them with any form of religious fervour.

    Little movements of unrest are constantly in progress; thus the Popperian-inspired real world of

    science is a kind of Maoist microcosm of continuing revolution. Kuhn, instead, envisages

    ordinary scientific life as something more in the nature of a settled opinion in a world of

    tranquil God-fearing lower middle-class contentment. Medawar, March of paradigms,

    Nature 273, 575 (1978) (PP/PBM/D.39). See also Medawar, Out of the machine-age,Times Lit. Suppl. (3 December 1976) (PP/PBM/D.38); Medawar, Advice to a young scientist(Harper & Row, New York, 1979), pp. 9193.

    22 Medawar, op. cit. (note 5), p. 53.

    23 Ibid.

    24 Karl Popper, The open society and its enemies (Routledge, London, 1945).

    25 Karl Popper, Unended questan intellectual autobiography (William Collins, Glasgow, 1986),

    p. 115.

    26 Medawar, The open society and its greatest friend, Vogue (December 1973) (PP/PBM/D.9).27 Medawar, The Philosophy of Karl Popper, Lecture at the Royal Institution, 4 March 1977 (PP/

    PBM/D.69).28 In his intellectual biography An unended quest, Popper recounts how his Logik der Forschung

    was surprisingly successful, far beyond his home city of Vienna. There were more reviews, in

    more languages, than there were of The logic of scientific discovery 25 years later, and fuller

    reviews in English. As a consequence he received many letters from various countries in

    Europe with many invitations to lecture. These included one from Bedford College,

    London, in the autumn of 1935. (Popper, op. cit. (note 25), pp. 107108.) It was here

    that he first aroused the interest of Professor John Henry Woodger, the biologist and

    philosopher of biology. At Woodgers Theoretical Biology Club in the 1930s he met some

    of the distinguished biologists of the day: J. D. Bernal, Dorothy Crowfoot (later Hodgkin),

    W. Floyd, J. B. S. Haldane, Joseph Needham, C. H. Waddington, B. P. Weisner and, of

    course, J. H. Woodger. Even allowing for the depth of friendship that evolved between the

    two men, Popper was steadfast that among such luminaries and other young talent he was

    to subsequently meet at Oxford, Medawarall six foot five inches of himwas the most

    outstanding one, both literally and metaphorically. Sir Karl Popper, A new interpretation

    of Darwin, Medawar Lecture, Royal Society, 10 June 1986 (PP/PBM/A.108). The RoyalSocietyunder the presidential guidance of Sir Andrew Huxley in 1985wished to endow

    a lecture in honour of Medawar. Needless to say the proposal and Councils acceptance

    of it reflect the very high regard in which you are held by the Fellows and countless

    others. In suggesting that the subject might be the philosophy of science, Council had

    your own interest in it specifically in mind. Huxley to Medawar, 25 April 1985 (PP/PBM/A.42).

    29 J. D. Bernal, The social function of science (Routledge, London, 1939).

    30 Bernal wrote a stinging rebuke of Poppers ideas on historicism in a review of The open society

    and its enemies in Has history a meaning?, Br. J. Phil. Sci. 6, 164169 (1956).

    31 Karl Popper, The poverty of historicism, Economica 11, 86103 (1944).

    32 David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature (1739).

    33 Medawar, op. cit. (note 26), p. 44.

    34 Medawar, op. cit. (note 27). For a nuanced analysis of Poppers philosophy, see Malachi Haim

    Hacohen, Karl Popperthe formative years, 19021945. Politics and philosophy in interwar

    Vienna (Cambridge University Press, 2001). The present paper is not concerned with the

    scholastic philosophical debates surrounding Poppers philosophy. Instead, it concentrates on

    Medawars association of anti-inductivism with the creative scientific imagination. I am

    grateful for the insight of an anonymous referee in this respect.

  • 35 Medawar, Expectation and prediction, Plutos republic (Oxford University Press, 1982),

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    36 Medawar to Popper, 21 March 1949 (LSE/POPPER/325.26).37 Rupert Crawshay-Williams, Russell remembered (Oxford University Press, London, 1970),

    p. 60.

    38 One aspect of the lectures that aroused great interest was his suggestionprovocative at the

    timethat population growth might prove a headache in the future. A lifes work based on

    faith in the future of mankind, Sunday Times (24 February 1975); The three battles of a

    Nobel Scientist, Sunday Times (20 January 1980) (PP/PBM/A.106).39 Medawar, New Scient. 5 (124), 763 (1959). Medawar was writing in response to Mendelssohns

    review for New Scientist (op. cit., note 17). Medawar attempted to cheer a despondent Popper:

    Dont worry!Not everyone will listen to the baying of a stray ass. Medawar to Popper,

    14 March 1959 (LSE/POPPER/325.26).40 C. P. Snow, Things do get better, Daily Telegraph (10 June 1972) (PP/PBM/F.47); Snow

    was quoted as saying that if Medawar had designed the world it would be a better place.

    Transcript of The hope of progress, Horizon (television programme, BBC1, 14 May 1988)

    (PP/PBM/F.72).41 Medawar, House in order, World (9 December 1972) (PP/PBM/C.152).42 Aldous Huxley, Literature and science (Chatto & Windus, London, 1963), p. 72; cited in Medawar,

    Science and literature, Romanes Lecture, Encounter 32, 1516 (1969) (PP/PBM/D.9).43 Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    44 William Blake, Milton (1804), bk 2, pl. 4; cited in Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    45 Blake, JerusalemThe Emanation of the Giant Albion (1804), ch. 1, pl. 10; cited in Medawar,

    op. cit. (note 42).

    46 William Whewell, The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, vol. 1 (London, 1840), p. 77; cited

    in Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    47 Bertrand Russell, The principles of mathematics (Cambridge University Press, 1903), p. 97;

    cited in Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    48 Isaac Newton, Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, 3rd edn (1726); cited in

    Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    49 Thomas Burnet, Sacred Theory of the Earth (London, 1726); cited in Medawar, op. cit. (note

    42).

    50 Medawar, op. cit. (note 42).

    51 Ibid.

    52 Medawar, Hypothesis and imagination, Times Lit. Suppl. (25 October 1963) (PP/PBM/D.5).53 Ibid.

    54 Medawar, Nature and human nature (BBC Radio 3, 8 August 1971) (PP/PBM/D.12).55 Medawar, Is the scientific paper a fraud?, Listener (12 September 1963) (PP/PBM/D.8).56 Ibid. Edge was soon to leave the BBC to found the Edinburgh University Science Studies Unit,

    from which the new sociology of scientific knowledge stemmed in the 1960s and 1970s. Much

    of the work in this field has involved empirically accentuating the kernel of Medawars talk,

    namely the disparity between how scientists actually work and how they record their work

    for publication. For a rich contextualization, see Steve Fuller, Thomas Kuhn: a philosophical

    history for our times (Chicago University Press, 2000), pp. 324331.

    57 Medawar to Sir Francis Walshe FRS, 23 October 1963 (PP/PBM/D.8).58 Quintin Hogg to Medawar, 11 November 1963 (PP/PBM/D.8).59 Peter Wilsher, Magnificent monologue, The Times (8 September 1963) (PP/PBM/D.8).60 Br. Med. J. (21 November 1964). There was a whole flux of letters to Saturday Review

    (5 September 1964), for instance (PP/PBM/D.8).61 Darwin to Fawcett, 18 September 1861. More letters of Charles Darwin (ed. F. Darwin and

    A. C. Steward) (London, 1903), p. 176; cited in Medawar, op. cit. (note 52).

  • 62 Gunther S. Stent, Ne plus ultra, Nature 240, 265267 (1972) (PP/PBM/D.14). Those whomStent had in mind included Philip Morrison in Life (1 March 1968), John Lear in Saturday

    Review (16 March 1968), Jacob Bronowski in The Nation (18 March 1968) and Erwin

    Chargaff in Science (29 March 1968). Medawars review was singled out by Stent as an

    object lesson of what it takes to write a good review in the borderland between literature and

    science.

    63 Robert Merton, N.Y. Times Book Review (25 February 1968) (PP/PBM/D.14).64 Medawar, Lucky Jim: review of J. D. Watson, The Double Helix, N.Y. Rev. Books (28 March

    1968) (PP/PBM/D.14).65 Ibid.

    66 N. A. Mitchison, Peter Brian Medawar. 28 February 1915 2 October 1987, Biogr. Mems

    Fell. R. Soc. 35, 282301 (1990).

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    SIR PETER MEDAWAR: SCIENCE, CREATIVITY AND THE POPULARIZATION OF KARL POPPERRecognizing Poppers worthThe two culturesGetting the message acrossAcknowledgementsNotes