No. 115/2023

because it is neither oriented to a specific discipline nor along national lines. Everything is connected to everything else, as Humboldt once established. The Global South is being particularly hard hit by climate change. At the same time, these countries are under-represented in top-flight research, even to some extent in the Humboldt Network … And to change that is one of my goals. Excellent science should not be a question of geography. But the conditions under which people work are very different. What we here consider to be excellent is simply difficult to accomplish when you are not working in a highly developed country. I have huge respect, for example, for the researchers I have met in Africa who achieve great things under really difficult conditions. Africa has enormous potential, not just as a source of green energy but also in the concomitant research and development. Research in Germany is missing out by not integrating this potential sufficiently. In its 70-year history, the Foundation has managed to recruit researchers from more than 140 countries for its “network of trust”. In the case of Russia or China, people are now asking whether Germany has been too trusting of its partners … The accusation of being too trusting is absolutely justified, in my opinion. I think Germany sometimes goes over the top in its desire to be international. And that even goes so far as to betray its own interests. What needs to change in our dealings with a country like China? This has nothing to do with individuals from China with whom we cooperate on a basis of trust. But in the last resort, a science system is, of course, part of a state system. And if the latter is geared towards autocratic world dominance, we must also ask ourselves whether we really want to place our trust in its hands. I don’t think so. I’m not in favour of isolation, but we have to agree on clear rules, first and foremost on the issue of intellectual property. The federal government strives for value- based foreign policy. Should the Foundation would like to see more discussion of content rather than who has written what about whom. I really dislike expert opinions that force you to study the precise choice of words in the very last sentence in order to discover what the reviewer is actually trying to tell you. The precise, or rather, the supposedly correct choice of words is becoming ever more important in university debates, too. How important is political correctness to you? I think there is a tendency to expect academia to buckle down and behave exactly as certain segments of society want it to. That’s dreadful – because academia should really be a place for open and free debate, and universities a place where people learn to tolerate and thrash out differing points of view. There is evidence to suggest that diversified teams produce better results. Is diversity an indispensable goal in enhancing the quality of research? If we were to select people totally impartially, solely on the grounds of quality, the problem would solve itself. I know this happens with musicians. They have to audition behind a black curtain, so no-one knows anything about their attributes. Their music is heard, and a decision is made. I sometimes wish it were like this in science because we all have prejudices and let ourselves be influenced by them. German society in particular is not free of prejudice. Which countries are better? The United States, for example, Australia, and England, too, three countries in which I gained some experience of life and observed less prejudice. This may only be true on the surface, but integrating people from other cultures is certainly easier there than it is here. You trained as a bricklayer. Did you yourself meet with resistance in academia? No. But I have to say that I did my apprenticeship while I was still at school. I wasn’t the least interested in my schooling at the time, so I skived off and headed for the building site. My parents had to write a lot of excuse letters. Despite that, my final grades were still quite good, although I ended up with serious gaps in my education, of course clear to our partners. We are part of the western system of values and this system of values must be defended. One problem common to all science systems is the pressure to compete and publish. What does this mean for the Foundation’s work? This is a real failure in our system. If the aim is to gain knowledge, it is totally unproductive for researchers to always have to be on the lookout for the next paper in Science to be able to achieve the h-index score for their ongoing funding application. This makes the Humboldt Foundation’s task of identifying excellence ever more difficult. Is selling science an indication of excellence? Is that what impact means? When we are talking about genuinely original research, that is a very, very difficult question to answer because initially, at least, it has no impact whatsoever in terms of multiple citations. So how can we go about making fair funding decisions? You have to make the effort to evaluate individually, be absolutely clear about the selection criteria and come to a decision on the basis of verifiable arguments. Generally, I be taking an interest in human rights as well as academic standards? The system of values in academia is based on respect. When I’m working with a researcher from a system in which the individual is not respected, I am faced with a fundamental conflict. Human dignity should be protected everywhere. We must make that absolutely THE WESTERN SYSTEM OF VALUES MUST BE DEFENDED. “ Photo: Humboldt Foundation/David Ausserhofer › 19 HUMBOLDT KOSMOS 115/2023

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