rhody said:
While browsing BBC news yesterday, I ran across this, interesting stats...
"[URL country has the best brains?
Total Nobel prizes won since 1901 top five countries[/URL]
The US outranks the UK by almost a 3 to 1 ratio
US 323
UK 117
Germany 103
France 57
Sweden 28
Rhody...
I'm sorry, but does anyone else find these arguments a little silly? America's a bigger country. Perhaps we could compare Western Europe to America, or the 'Middle East' to the old commonwealth countries. Or Fiji to the rest of the world.
Gokul43201 said:
Do you believe the majority of immigrants won their Prizes for work done in the home countries? My guess: most likely not.
Do you think most of the immigrant Laureates would have won their Prizes had they remained in the home states? Again, I think most likely not.
Would they have won had they emigrated to a different country, like the UK, Germany or France? That's a harder question, and I think, probably at a lower frequency.
Bonafide Americanness is irrelevant if the discussion is about which country creates the best atmosphere for Nobel worthy research. In some fields in particular, there is no doubting the fact the US institutions dominate.
Economics is a great example. Since the Economics Prize was instituted about 40 years ago, 70% of the Laureates have been Americans.
If someone wins the nobel prize at an American Institution and their not 'American' (whatever that means), and they studied their undergraduate and/or Ph.D elsewhere, does it count as an American Nobel Prize? I'm sure the research faculties are comprised of researches from all over the world. I like your point about whether the same individual would have been able to conduct the research that won the nobel prize elsewhere; but again, America is a big country with many insitutions, which needs to be taken into account: you could have absolutely loads of colleges, and only a very small minority provide the opportunity for winning nobel prizes.
Personally, I think it's ridiculous to claim any credit for the achievements of others purely through a tenuous connection of 'nationality'. It would be absolutley absurd for me to claim any credit for Newton, Hooke, Wren, Darwin, Turing, and so on. Or for a Frenchman to claim any credit for the work of Legrange, de Broglie, Carnot, Fourier, etc. Okay, it's probably the case that, born in certain other countries, they may not have had the opportunity to go on to do the great things they did. I actually think it's extrememly likely that within the 'western' countries, individuals who would have made great scientists never had the opportunity, perhaps because of their socio-economic background, think of all the lost and wasted talent! I'm not that familiar with the American system, but don't they charge absurd amounts of money for an education at a good insitution, what happens if you can't afford it, is every single place open to a scholarship? Doubtful. So it's certainly not meritocratic.
But anyway, back to my rambling point, I think we should give the individuals credit for THEIR achievements, for all the hard work THEY have done, and stop sponging off of their hard work through a tenuous connection of nationality!