: Andreas Seidl
: Handover of Power - Innovation Global Version - Volume 13/21
: Books on Demand
: 9783756875276
: 1
: CHF 2.50
:
: Technik
: English
: 100
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
Innovation rethought Do you sometimes worry that important innovations are introduced too late? And do you also wish for an implementation of your good ideas? How can promising inventions be implemented quickly and easily? This book tells us: ... how inventors can find suitable researchers, industrial property rights, investors, producers and customers in a directory. ... how the linking of education, research and development can provide a mass of skilled workers who invent and implement innovations at lightning speed. ... which path innovations can take when they are implemented in a large state-owned company until patent protection expires. After 20 years of work on this book series, Andreas Seidl thus ventures a step towards founding a party. In doing so, he entertains his readers both intellectually and visionarily. If this work can give you hope, inspire you or move you to action, it has fulfilled its purpose. Available in German and English

The author is a qualified political scientist and social education worker. He acquired his professional experience in Brussels at the European Union, in Frankfurt at the stock exchange and in day-care centres for children in the Rhine-Main area of Germany. He has been keeping a diary of ideas for 20 years and publishes in this book all his previous political proposals for solutions in an overall concept. As a passionate social researcher, he is interested in the concerns, lifestyles and ideas for the future of his fellow human beings. As a convinced democrat, he enjoys going to demonstrations and activists to find out what motivates them and what causes their motivations. As an author, he strives for restrained criticism, constructive approaches to solutions and writing in understandable language.

5 Research and development29


The Ministry of Innovation pursues a research policy that connects basic research, applied research and industrial research. Basic research mainly conducts research and hardly any development. While basic research exclusively brings to light new findings in all sciences because it wants to fully understand the environment, other subfields can put these findings to use in new technologies. Applied research carries out both basic research and development for practical use. Industrial research carries out little research and mainly development for commercial use.

All three sub-areas of research are to be researched by all research institutions. A research institution may specialise in one sub-area, but must make proposals for other sub-areas on how the research results can be used in the other sub-areas. State research institutions are obliged to conduct research in all three sub-areas. They also indicate which sub-area could make further use of their research results. In order to make further use possible in suitable research projects or suitable research institutions, an algorithm records all information and proposals in the Research Directory and finds suitable profiles and groups.

Nationals have the lifelong right to conduct research in the Innovation Labs and educational institutions. In doing so, they must partly adhere to the given requirements or adapt to conditions. Scientific freedom applies to all researchers. They are allowed to research what they want, but must not endanger humans or the environment in the process. Endangering animals and plants may be permissible for experimental purposes. The endangerment of humans may be permissible if the test subjects give their consent after being fully informed about the experiment. In case of doubt, the health auditors of the Company Auditing Agency decide.

5.1 Continental cooperation


In voting with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, various fields of research are explored in the different member states of the Continental Union. All member states form a community of continental research organisations to solve all urgent research tasks in a division of labour. For example, Germany could specialise in life sciences and France in economics, or Germany could research mobility and France energy sources.

5.2 Research institutions


Research institutions are mobile Innovation Labs, educational institutions, institutes and research departments of domestic citizens, which together form the Community of Domestic Research Institutions managed by the Innovation Agency. The indoor service promotes networking among the members of the community of domestic research institutions in the Research Directory and provides funding through the Research Cost Fund.

Research institutions are required to conduct basic research, to conduct only sustainable research, to share their premises or materials as long as they do not use them themselves and to network via the Research Directory.

Applied research and industrial research must always devote 10% of their annual research activities to basic research. It is possible to carry out a large-scale basic research project over a period of months using all available resources and then not have to do any basic research at all for many years.

Sustainable research means that no development may be carried out that leads to hazardous waste that cannot be disposed of or causes damage or late effects to humans and the environment. For example, the development of a nuclear power plant would be prohibited if radiated nuclear waste cannot be rendered harmless. Research, on the other hand, is permitted. For example, a nuclear power plant could be built for testing purposes to produce radioactive waste that can be used to develop procedures for disposal. Shifting the residue of research to subsequent generations through an economic use of dangerous research results is considered intentional bodily harm to subsequent generations.

All research