This is a pretty weird set of statements. Governments are great at research. Mostly great at funding it: the universities do all that research with heavy government funding. Plus, many of those universities are government institutions. Our government was key for developing agriculture, the Internet, particle physics, space travel, and a load of military innovations. The CDC is still key in advancing medicine.Torco wrote: ↑Sun Nov 21, 2021 9:42 am governments are kind of shite at research. universities are better, and they often have alliances with industry in order to research things. but no, this idea that basic, unmotivated research often leads to useful results is not really true. people didn't discover the internal combustion engine as an accident while musing about the expansion of gases as a general phenomenon, it was working people, engineers and chemists and physicists trying to come up with something useful that went "what if we could do this thing", and tried, and managed it. a key problem with market coops is that you need to have copyright and patent systems in order to make sure people actually keep doing this under your socialism, and those tend to discourage innnovation strongly.
I'm not sure what you're saying about patent and copyright-- they're needed but they're bad?
I'm not sure I get the pooh-poohing of basic research, or placing "physicists" in the category of people "trying to come up with something useful". Inventors and engineers are highly valuable, of course, and historically craftsmen and even humbler people have contributed immensely to science. But you also need abstract-oriented people to make sense of the practical information, and come up with theories that lead to more useful things. And really, for sure really, abstract ideas that are worked out for the theoretical fun of it often lead to practical results years or centuries later.