In the last few centuries, science as a social enterprise has grown rapidly. The few individuals who could conduct natural research in antiquity were either wealthy individuals themselves, had wealthy sponsors, or had the backing of a religious group. Today, scientific research has tremendous government support and also ongoing support from the private sector. Available methods of communication have improved tremendously over time. Instead of waiting months or years for a hand-copied letter to arrive, today scientific communication can be practically instantaneous. Earlier, most natural philosophers worked in relative isolation, due to the difficulty and slowness of communication. Still, there was a considerable amount of cross-fertilization between distant groups and individuals. Nowadays, almost all modern scientists participate in a
scientific community, hypothetically global in nature (though often based around a relatively few nations and institutions of stature), but also strongly segregated into different fields of study. The scientific community is important because it represents a source of established knowledge which, if used properly, ought to be more reliable than personally acquired knowledge of any given individual. The community also provides a
feedback mechanism, often in the form of practices such as
peer review and
reproducibility. Most items of scientific content (experimental results, theoretical proposals, or literature reviews) are reported in
scientific journals and are hypothetically subjected to peer scrutiny, though a number of scholarly critics from both inside and outside the scientific community have, in recent decades, began to question the effect of commercial and government investment in science on the peer review and publishing process, as well as the internal disciplinary limitations to the scientific publication process. -era
printing presses allowed the rapid spread of new ideas across 15th and 16th century Europe. A major development of the
Scientific Revolution was the foundation of scientific societies:
Academia Secretorum Naturae (Accademia dei Segreti, the Academy of the Mysteries of Nature) can be considered the first scientific community; founded in
Naples 1560 by
Giambattista della Porta. The academy had an exclusive membership rule: discovery of a new law of nature was a prerequisite for admission. It was soon shut down by
Pope Paul V for alleged
sorcery. The Academia Secretorum Naturae was replaced by the
Accademia dei Lincei, which was founded in
Rome in 1603. The Lincei included
Galileo as a member, but failed upon his condemnation in 1633. The
Accademia del Cimento,
Florence 1657, lasted 10 years. The
Royal Society of London, 1660 to the present day, brought together a diverse collection of scientists to discuss theories, conduct experiments, and review each other's work. The
Académie des Sciences was created as an institution of the government of France 1666, meeting in the King's library. The Akademie der Wissenschaften began in
Berlin 1700. Early scientific societies provided valuable functions, including a community open to and interested in
empirical inquiry, and also more familiar with and more educated about the subject. In 1758, with the aid of his pupils,
Lagrange established a society, which was subsequently incorporated as the Turin Academy. Much of what is considered the modern institution of science was formed during its professionalization in the 19th century. During this time the location of scientific research shifted primarily to
universities, though to some extent it also became a standard component of
industry as well. In the early years of the 20th century, especially after the role of science in the
first World War, governments of major industrial nations began to invest heavily in scientific research. This effort was dwarfed by the funding of scientific research undertaken by all sides in
World War II, which produced such "wonder weapons" as
radar,
rocketry, and the
atomic bomb. During the
Cold War, a large amount of government resources were poured into science by the United States,
USSR, and many European powers. It was during this time that
DARPA funded nationwide computer networks including
ARPANET the precursor to the
Internet. In the post-Cold War era, a decline in government funding from many countries has been met with an increase of industrial and private investment. The funding of science is a major factor in its historical and global development. So although science is hypothetically international in scope, in a practical sense it has usually centered around wherever it could find the most funding. During the Scientific Revolution, early scientists communicated in Latin, which had been the language of academia during the Middle Ages, and which was read and written by scholars from many countries. In the mid-1600s, publications started to appear in local languages. By 1900, German, French and English were dominant.
Anti-German sentiment caused by World War I and World War II and boycotts of German scientists resulted in the loss of German as a scientific language. In later decades of the 20th century, the economic dominance and scientific productivity of the United States led to the rise of English, which after the end of the Cold War has become the dominant language of scientific communication. ==Political support==