dave wrote: I'm inevitably going to get bogged down in stereotypes here, but one example might be that in Britain, individual eccentrics that lock themselves away in room with a weird piece of equipment are more tolerated, whereas in the US, someone with a hugely ambitious scheme costing millions of dollars might be well received. But that's getting into dangerous terrority so I'll stop.

thus demonstrating the point. Do you think that's true, you others who actually do the stuff -- do you see that different shows of creativity are tolerated better in different places?
Again, you know, I'm reading the Judson book, and there's a good long chunk with Linus Pauling...the quotes from the other scientists seem to cast scientific creativity in terms of making connections that others were too cautious or simply not imaginative enough to make. Here's a quote, starting with a quote about Pauling from Seymour Singer:
"'I don't think there has ever been anybody doing great science whose ego has not been involved very, very deeply. It's just one of the things that make science so competitive. But the competitiveness is just a wart on science. The questioni is, how deeply is the man involved? If the objectivity goes, you get nothing but some kind of personal vision. That's the difference between science and religion. I was there. What Linus did, with his ego drive, was to insist that from his data on crystal structures of simple molecules, he could extrapolate. For example, that the peptide bond had to be planar. So he went ahead and imposed these restrictions. The length of the bond between the carbon and nitrogen atoms was much shorter, according to the x-ray data, than if the bond were single. So it had to have substantial double-bond character. So it had to be flat. Pauling, to begin with, has enormous physical intuition.' That, I had learned, is the highest praise. 'But what was astonishing about Pauling, and what makes him great, was that he was willing to move to a concept on the basis of certain data whose relevance was not clear to others. Only Linus showed the willingness to take the inductive leap. Then, once he had the idea, he pushed it. The history of science shows that that, in itself, is perfectly justified -- yet it's the same egocentricity that led him to collect thousands of signatures of scientists on a petition to ban nuclear testing.'
"I now asked Pauling what he thought about that. He shrugged. 'Well, maybe there's something to it.' He paused. 'I would say that I probably
think more about problems than other people do.'
"(Later when I quoted Pauling's remark to Perutz, he laughed and laughed, and then asked, 'But didn't Linus also tell you that he has got more imagination than other people? Because, you know, it's true, he has.')"