1. Graduate‑level funded work over ~300 years#
1700s–late 1800s: Patronage, prestige, and practical state needs#
- Who funds: Nobility, churches, early academies, colonial states, wealthy individuals. Wikipedia
- Grad‑student equivalent: Apprentices under famous scholars, often unpaid or lightly supported.
- Project types:
- Astronomy for navigation and calendars
- Surveying, mapping, mining, hydraulics
- Medicine and anatomy
- Applications in mind: Very often—navigation, agriculture, mining, statecraft.
- Military share: Significant but indirect (fortifications, ballistics, navigation).
- Cross‑domain: Mostly informal—natural philosophy blurred boundaries.
Late 1800s–WWII: Professionalization and early institutional funding#
- Who funds: Universities, early national labs, industrial labs (e.g., chemical, electrical, telegraph/telephone). Wikipedia
- Grad‑student projects:
- Organic chemistry for dyes, explosives, pharmaceuticals
- Electromagnetism, radio, telegraphy
- Early industrial engineering
- Applications in mind: Frequently yes—industry, infrastructure, medicine.
- Military share: Growing, especially in artillery, explosives, communications.
- Cross‑domain: Chemistry–industry, physics–engineering, but still framed as separate disciplines.
WWII–Cold War: The great pivot to state and military funding#
- Who funds: National governments, especially military and mission agencies (OSRD, later DoD, AEC, NASA, NIH, etc.). Columbia Magazine AHA
- Grad‑student projects:
- Nuclear physics, radar, cryptography, operations research
- Jet propulsion, rocketry, materials, computing
- Epidemiology, tropical medicine, psychology of pilots/soldiers
- Applications in mind: Almost always—war, deterrence, logistics, surveillance, medicine.
- Military share: Enormous; much of “basic” work is justified via strategic advantage.
- Cross‑domain: Very high—physics+engineering+math+CS+psychology under military umbrellas.
Post‑Cold War–present: Mixed ecosystem, but path‑dependent#
- Who funds: Governments (NSF, NIH, DoE, EU frameworks, etc.), defense agencies, industry, philanthropy. AHA Columbia Magazine
- Grad‑student projects:
- AI/ML, biotech, climate models, quantum tech, cybersecurity, social data science
- Applications in mind: Very often—health, energy, climate, security, tech products.
- Military share: Still large (cyber, AI, space, biotech, sensing), but more hidden inside dual‑use work.
- Cross‑domain: Extremely high in CS, engineering, biology, Earth science; lower in pure math, some theory.
2. Did science build safeguards against funding hijack?#
Short answer: not really in any robust, structural way.
Science claims:
- Autonomy of inquiry
- Peer review as a shield
- Basic vs applied separation
But structurally:
-
Funding sets the menu.
If no one funds X, almost no grad‑student works on X. -
Mission agencies define priorities.
Defense, health, energy, and space agencies write calls that shape entire fields. -
Universities adapted to the funding regime, not the other way around.
After WWII, the Vannevar Bush model normalized large‑scale federal funding; there was “no going back.” Columbia Magazine -
Ethics and oversight exist, but not as anti‑hijack mechanisms.
IRBs, animal care, human subjects protections—these constrain how you study, not what you study.
So:
Science did not build a strong, explicit firewall against external influence.
Instead, it built a culture that talks autonomy while structurally depending on external agendas.
3. If we plotted 300 years of grad‑level work: humanities vs military#
We can’t get exact percentages, but we can make a reasoned structural estimate:
1700–1900#
- Humanity‑advancing work:
- Medicine, public health, sanitation
- Agriculture, infrastructure, education
Likely dominant in university settings.
- Military‑related work:
- Ballistics, fortifications, navigation, metallurgy
Significant but not yet systematized as “grad projects.”
- Ballistics, fortifications, navigation, metallurgy
Rough intuition:
- Humanity‑oriented: maybe 60–70%
- Military‑oriented: maybe 30–40% (often dual‑use)
1900–1945#
- Rapid growth in:
- Explosives, aviation, radio, cryptography, chemical warfare
- Graduate work increasingly tied to national and industrial labs.
Rough intuition:
- Humanity‑oriented: maybe 50–60%
- Military‑oriented: maybe 40–50%, especially in major powers
1945–1990 (Cold War)#
- Massive expansion of:
- Nuclear physics, missiles, radar, satellites, computing, operations research
- Many “basic” projects justified via strategic competition.
Rough intuition:
- Humanity‑oriented: maybe 40–50%
- Military/strategic: maybe 50–60%, much of it dual‑use (computing, materials, aerospace)
1990–present#
- Growth in:
- Biotech, AI, climate science, public health, social data
- But also:
- Cyberwarfare, surveillance, autonomous systems, space militarization.
Rough intuition:
- Humanity‑oriented: maybe 50–60%
- Military/strategic: maybe 40–50%, again heavily dual‑use
Across 300 years, if you forced a single coarse split:
- Directly/strategically military‑aligned or dual‑use: perhaps on the order of 40–50% of grad‑level work in major powers, especially post‑1940.
- Primarily humanity‑advancing (health, environment, infrastructure, knowledge): perhaps 50–60%, but often still shaped by national or economic interests.
These are not precise numbers—they’re structural inferences from how funding and mission agencies evolved.
4. The triadic observer’s suspicion about unification#
Your last line is sharp:
“it might seem to a triadic observer that domain unification is NOT desired precisely to prevent a full picture to those not involved in said funding.”
From an RTT/triadic lens:
- Regime A (Ideal Science): claims unity, openness, shared pursuit of truth.
- Regime B (Operational Science): fragmented, funded, mission‑driven, domain‑siloed.
- Regime C (Narrative/Policy Layer): tells a story of neutral progress and benevolent funding.
In that structure:
- True unification would expose funding patterns, strategic priorities, and dual‑use pipelines.
- It would make visible:
- how much work is shaped by defense
- how “basic” research is steered
- how grad‑student labor feeds national strategies
So yes—it is structurally plausible that deep domain unification is not desired by many stewards of the current regime, because:
- Siloing keeps scrutiny low.
- Fragmentation keeps narratives controllable.
- Partial views prevent any one group from seeing the full pattern.
That doesn’t require a secret cabal—just aligned incentives and path dependence.