Who cares about physics today? A marketing strategy for the survival of fundamental science and the benefit of society
Umberto Cannella

TL;DR
This paper advocates for prioritizing public engagement and fundamental research in science funding, emphasizing their crucial roles in societal benefit and scientific progress amidst economic constraints.
Contribution
It argues for treating science popularization as a funding priority rather than a commodity, highlighting its importance for societal support and scientific advancement.
Findings
Public engagement influences societal attitudes towards science.
Fundamental research underpins applied scientific developments.
Prioritizing science communication benefits long-term scientific progress.
Abstract
It would seem that the present dry economic times impose a very precise focus for science in general and physics in particular: research, possibly of applied type. However in doing so two basic pillars of a healthy future for science are being undermined: fundamental research and public engagement. The first is what makes applications possible in the first place, many times with a path from inception to implementation that is as long and indirect as poorly advertised. The second pillar, public engagement, is mostly regarded as a commodity: if there is good level of funding scientists can consider spending money for public relations otherwise this is the first thing scientists cut because it is the least necessary. On the contrary, public engagement in science is very much needed, at the very least because the public is either an enemy or an ally, as testified respectively by the climate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Communication and Perception · Science and Climate Studies · International Science and Diplomacy
