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Censorship of science in the Soviet Union

The censorship of science in the Soviet Union affected scientific research in various fields. All humanities and social sciences were additionally tested for strict accordance with historical materialism. These tests were alleged to serve as a cover for political suppression of scientists who engaged in research labeled as "idealistic" or "bourgeois".[1]

In several cases, the consequences of ideological influences were dramatic. The suppression of research began during the Stalin era and continued after his regime.[2]

Certain scientific fields in the Soviet Union were suppressed primarily after being labeled as ideologically suspect.[1][3]

Examples

Biology

In the mid-1930s, the agronomist Trofim Lysenko started a campaign against genetics[4] and was supported by Stalin. If the field of genetics' connection to Nazis wasn't enough, Mendelian genetics was also suppressed due to beliefs that it was "bourgeoisie science" and its association with the priest Gregor Mendel due to hostility to religion because of the Soviet policy of state atheism.[5][6][7][8][9]

In 1950, the Soviet government organized the Joint Scientific Session of the USSR Academy of Sciences and the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences, the "Pavlovian session". Several prominent Soviet physiologists (L.A. Orbeli, P.K. Anokhin, A.D. Speransky, I.S. Beritashvily) were attacked for deviating from Pavlov's teaching.[citation needed] As a consequence of the Pavlovian session, Soviet physiologists were forced to accept a dogmatic ideology; the quality of physiological research deteriorated and Soviet physiology excluded itself from the international scientific community.[10] Later Soviet biologists heavily criticised Lysenko's theories and pseudo-scientific methods.

Cybernetics

Cybernetics was also outlawed as bourgeois pseudoscience during Stalin's reign. Norbert Wiener's 1948 book Cybernetics was condemned and translated only in 1958. A 1954 edition of the Brief Philosophical Dictionary condemned cybernetics for "mechanistically equating processes in live nature, society and in technical systems, and thus standing against materialistic dialectics and modern scientific physiology developed by Ivan Pavlov".[11] (However this article was removed from the 1955 reprint of the dictionary.) After an initial period of doubts, Soviet cybernetics took root, but this early attitude hampered the development of computing in the Soviet Union.

History

Soviet historiography (the way in which history was and is written by scholars of the Soviet Union[12]) was significantly influenced by the strict control by the authorities aimed at propaganda of communist ideology and Soviet power.

Since the late 1930s, Soviet historiography treated the party line and reality as one and the same.[13] As such, if it was a science, it was a science in service of a specific political and ideological agenda, commonly employing historical negationist methods.[14] In the 1930s, historic archives were closed and original research was severely restricted. Historians were required to pepper their works with references – appropriate or not – to Stalin and other "Marxist-Leninist classics", and to pass judgment – as prescribed by the Party – on pre-revolution historic Russian figures.[15]

Many works of Western historians were forbidden or censored, many areas of history were also forbidden for research as, officially, they never happened.[16] Translations of foreign historiography were often produced in a truncated form, accompanied with extensive censorship and corrective footnotes.[citation needed] For example, in the Russian 1976 translation of Basil Liddell Hart's History of the Second World War pre-war purges of Red Army officers, the secret protocol to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, many details of the Winter War, the occupation of the Baltic states, the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Western Allied assistance to the Soviet Union during the war, many other Western Allies' efforts, the Soviet leadership's mistakes and failures, criticism of the Soviet Union and other content were censored out.[17]

The Katyn massacre was formally assigned to Nazi Germany but the subject was frequently concealed. Soviet famines were taboo.[citation needed]

Linguistics

At the beginning of Stalin's rule, the dominant figure in Soviet linguistics was Nikolai Yakovlevich Marr, who argued that language is a class construction and that language structure is determined by the economic structure of society. [18] Stalin, who had previously written about language policy as People's Commissar for Nationalities, read a letter by Arnold Chikobava criticizing the theory. He "summoned Chikobava to a dinner that lasted from 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. taking notes diligently."[19] In this way he grasped enough of the underlying issues to oppose this simplistic Marxist formalism, ending Marr's ideological dominance over Soviet linguistics. Stalin's principal work in the field was a small essay, "Marxism and Linguistic Questions."[20]

Pedology

Pedology was a popular area of research on the basis of numerous orphanages created after the Russian Civil War. Soviet pedology was a combination of pedagogy and psychology of human development, that heavily relied on various tests. It was officially banned in 1936 after a special decree of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union "On Pedolodical Perversions in the Narkompros System" on July 4, 1936.

Physics

In the late 1940s, some areas of physics, especially quantum mechanics but also special and general relativity, were also criticized on grounds of "idealism". Soviet physicists, such as K. V. Nikolskij and D. Blokhintzev, developed a version of the statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics, which was seen as more adhering to the principles of dialectical materialism.[21][22] However, although initially planned,[23] this process did not go as far as defining an "ideologically correct" version of physics and purging those scientists who refused to conform to it, because this was recognized as potentially too harmful to the Soviet nuclear program.[24][25] As Krylov writes on the perils of ideological intrusion into science, "Stalin rolled back the planned campaign against physics and instructed Beria to give physicists some space; this led to significant advances and accomplishments by Soviet scientists in several domains. However, neither Stalin nor the subsequent Soviet leaders were able to let go of the controls completely. Government control over science turned out to be a grand failure, and the attempt to patch the widening gap between the West and the East by espionage did not help. Today Russia is hopelessly behind the West in both technology and quality of life."[26]

Sociology

After the Russian Revolution, sociology was gradually "politicized, Bolshevisized and eventually, Stalinized".[27] From 1930s to 1950s, the discipline virtually ceased to exist in the Soviet Union.[27] Even in the era where it was allowed to be practiced, and not replaced by Marxist philosophy, it was always dominated by Marxist thought; hence sociology in the Soviet Union and the entire Eastern Bloc represented, to a significant extent, only one branch of sociology: Marxist sociology.[27] With the death of Joseph Stalin and the 20th Party Congress in 1956, restrictions on sociological research were somewhat eased, and finally, after the 23rd Party Congress in 1966, sociology in Soviet Union was once again officially recognized as an acceptable branch of science.[28]

Statistics

The quality (accuracy and reliability) of data published in the Soviet Union and used in historical research is another issue raised by various Sovietologists.[29][30][31][32] The Marxist theoreticians of the Party considered statistics as a social science; hence many applications of statistical mathematics were curtailed, particularly during the Stalin era.[33] Under central planning, nothing could occur by accident.[33] The law of large numbers and the idea of random deviation were decreed as "false theories".[33] Statistical journals and university departments were closed; world-renowned statisticians like Andrey Kolmogorov and Eugen Slutsky abandoned statistical research.[33]

As with all Soviet historiography, reliability of Soviet statistical data varied from period to period.[32] The first revolutionary decade and the period of Stalin's dictatorship both appear highly problematic with regards to statistical reliability; very little statistical data was published from 1936 to 1956 (see Soviet Census (1937)).[32] The reliability of data improved after 1956 when some missing data was published and Soviet experts themselves published some adjusted data for Stalin's era;[32] however the quality of documentation deteriorated.[31]

While on occasion statistical data useful in historical research might have been completely invented by the Soviet authorities,[30] there is little evidence that most statistics were significantly affected by falsification or insertion of false data with the intent to confound the West.[31] Data was however falsified both during collection – by local authorities who would be judged by the central authorities based on whether their figures reflected the central economy prescriptions – and by internal propaganda, with its goal to portray the Soviet state in most positive light to its very citizens.[29][32] Nonetheless the policy of not publishing, or simply not collecting, data that was deemed unsuitable for various reasons was much more common than simple falsification; hence there are many gaps in Soviet statistical data.[31] Inadequate or lacking documentation for much of Soviet statistical data is also a significant problem.[29][31][32]

Theme in literature

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Loren R. Graham (2004). Science in Russia and the Soviet Union. A Short History. Series: Cambridge Studies in the History of Science. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-28789-0
  2. ^ Loren R. Graham, Science and philosophy in the Soviet Union. New York, 1972[ISBN missing]
  3. ^ Mark Walker (2002) Science and Ideology. A Comparative History. Series: Routledge Studies in the History of Science, Technology and Medicine. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27122-6
  4. ^ Hudson, P. S., and R. H. Richens. The New Genetics in the Soviet Union. Cambridge, UK: English School of Agriculture, 1946.
  5. ^ Isis, Volume 37. History of Science Society, Académie internationale d'histoire des sciences. 1947. Retrieved 2007-10-18. The fact that Mendel was a priest has been similarly used to discredit his ideas.
  6. ^ Eugenics: Galton and After. Duckworth. 1952. Retrieved 2007-10-18. Was not Mendel a priest ? If, as the reactionaries maintain, genetic processes are subject to the laws of chance ...
  7. ^ George Aiken Taylor (1972). The Presbyterian Journal, Volume 31. Southern Presbyterian Journal Co. Retrieved 2007-10-18. Mendel, of course, must be discredited, in Communist thought, because he was a product of the West and of the Church.
  8. ^ The Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy, Volumes 23–27. Australasian Association of Psychology and Philosophy. 1945. Retrieved 2007-10-18. He trenchantly criticises Lysenko's vilification of the work of Mendel and Morgan as "fascist, bourgeois-capitalistic, and inspired by clerics" (that Mendel was a priest is taken as sufficient to discredit his experiments).
  9. ^ Gregor Mendel: And the Roots of Genetics, Edward Edelson, p. 14. "Lysenko won the support of Joseph Stalin, the ruthless Soviet dictator, and Mendel's rules were officially outlawed in the Soviet Union and the Eastern European Countries that it controlled at that time. Under Communism, the Mendel Museum in his monastery was closed."
  10. ^ Windholz G (1997) 1950 Joint Scientific Session: Pavlovians as the accusers and the accused. J Hist Behav Sci 33: 61–81.
  11. ^ «Кибернетика», Краткий философский словарь под редакцией М. Розенталя и П. Юдина (издание 4, дополненное и исправленное, Государственное издательство политической литературы, 1954.
  12. ^ It is not the history of the Soviet Union. See definitions of historiography for more details.
  13. ^ Taisia Osipova, Peasant rebellions: Origin, Scope, Design and Consequences, in Vladimir N. Brovkin (ed.), The Bolsheviks in Russian Society: The Revolution and the Civil Wars, Yale University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-300-06706-2. Google Print, pp. 154–76
  14. ^ Roger D. Markwick, Donald J. Raleigh, Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography, Palgrave Macmillan, 2001, ISBN 0-333-79209-2, Google Print, pp. 4–5
  15. ^ John L. H. Keep: A History of the Soviet Union 1945–1991: Last of the Empires, pap. 30–31
  16. ^ Ferro, Marc (2003). The Use and Abuse of History: Or How the Past Is Taught to Children. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-28592-6. See Chapters 8 Aspects and variations of Soviet history and 10 History in profile: Poland.
  17. ^ Lewis, B. E. (1977). "Soviet Taboo: Vtoraya Mirovaya Voina, History of the Second World War by B. Liddel Gart, B. Liddell Hart". Soviet Studies. Taylor & Francis. 29 (4): 603–6. doi:10.1080/09668137708411159. ISSN 0038-5859. JSTOR 150540.
  18. ^ Lähteenmäki, Mika (1 July 2006). "Nikolai Marr and the idea of a unified language". Language & Communication. 26 (3): 285–295. doi:10.1016/j.langcom.2006.02.006. ISSN 0271-5309. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  19. ^ Montefiore. p. 638, Phoenix, Reprinted paperback.
  20. ^ Joseph V. Stalin (1950-06-20). "Concerning Marxism in Linguistics", Pravda. Available online as Marxism and Problems of Linguistics including other articles and letters also published in Pravda soon after February 8 and July 4, 1950.
  21. ^ Olival Freire Jr.: Marxism and the Quantum Controversy: Responding to Max Jammer's Question 2012-11-14 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Péter Szegedi Cold War and Interpretations in Quantum Mechanics
  23. ^ Ethan Pollock (2006). . Princeton University Press. Archived from the original on 2010-07-02.
  24. ^ Josephson, P.R. (2005). Totalitarian Science and Technology. Amherst, NY: Humanity Books.
  25. ^ Graham, L.R. (1991). Science, Philosophy, and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union. Columbia University Press.
  26. ^ Krylov, Anna I. (2021-06-10). "The Peril of Politicizing Science". The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. 12 (22): 5371–5376. doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c01475. PMID 34107688.
  27. ^ a b c Elizabeth Ann Weinberg, The Development of Sociology in the Soviet Union, Taylor & Francis, 1974, ISBN 0-7100-7876-5, Google Print, pp. 8–9
  28. ^ Elizabeth Ann Weinberg, The Development of Sociology in the Soviet Union, p.11
  29. ^ a b c Nicholas Eberstadt and Daniel Patrick Moynihan, The Tyranny of Numbers: Mismeasurement and Misrule, American EnterpriseInstitute, 1995, ISBN 0-8447-3764-X, Google Print, p.138-140
  30. ^ a b Robert Conquest Reflections on a Ravaged Century (2000) ISBN 0-393-04818-7, page 101
  31. ^ a b c d e Edward A. Hewett, Reforming the Soviet Economy: Equality Versus Efficiency, Brookings Institution Press, 1988, ISBN 0-8157-3603-7, Google Print, p.7 and following chapters
  32. ^ a b c d e f Nikolai M. Dronin, Edward G. Bellinger, Climate Dependence And Food Problems In Russia, 1900–1990, Central European University Press, 2005, ISBN 963-7326-10-3, Google Print, pp. 15–16
  33. ^ a b c d David S. Salsburg, The Lady Tasting Tea: How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century, Owl Books, 2001, ISBN 0-8050-7134-2, Google Print, pp. 147–149
  • Я. В. Васильков, М. Ю. Сорокина (eds.), Люди и судьбы. Биобиблиографический словарь востоковедов жертв политического террора в советский период (1917–1991) ("People and Destiny. Bio-Bibliographic Dictionary of Orientalists – Victims of the political terror during the Soviet period (1917–1991)"), Петербургское Востоковедение (2003). online edition

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The censorship of science in the Soviet Union affected scientific research in various fields All humanities and social sciences were additionally tested for strict accordance with historical materialism These tests were alleged to serve as a cover for political suppression of scientists who engaged in research labeled as idealistic or bourgeois 1 In several cases the consequences of ideological influences were dramatic The suppression of research began during the Stalin era and continued after his regime 2 Certain scientific fields in the Soviet Union were suppressed primarily after being labeled as ideologically suspect 1 3 Contents 1 Examples 1 1 Biology 1 2 Cybernetics 1 3 History 1 4 Linguistics 1 5 Pedology 1 6 Physics 1 7 Sociology 1 8 Statistics 2 Theme in literature 3 See also 4 ReferencesExamples EditBiology Edit Main articles Lysenkoism and Pavlovian session In the mid 1930s the agronomist Trofim Lysenko started a campaign against genetics 4 and was supported by Stalin If the field of genetics connection to Nazis wasn t enough Mendelian genetics was also suppressed due to beliefs that it was bourgeoisie science and its association with the priest Gregor Mendel due to hostility to religion because of the Soviet policy of state atheism 5 6 7 8 9 In 1950 the Soviet government organized the Joint Scientific Session of the USSR Academy of Sciences and the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences the Pavlovian session Several prominent Soviet physiologists L A Orbeli P K Anokhin A D Speransky I S Beritashvily were attacked for deviating from Pavlov s teaching citation needed As a consequence of the Pavlovian session Soviet physiologists were forced to accept a dogmatic ideology the quality of physiological research deteriorated and Soviet physiology excluded itself from the international scientific community 10 Later Soviet biologists heavily criticised Lysenko s theories and pseudo scientific methods Cybernetics Edit Main article Cybernetics in the Soviet Union Cybernetics was also outlawed as bourgeois pseudoscience during Stalin s reign Norbert Wiener s 1948 book Cybernetics was condemned and translated only in 1958 A 1954 edition of the Brief Philosophical Dictionary condemned cybernetics for mechanistically equating processes in live nature society and in technical systems and thus standing against materialistic dialectics and modern scientific physiology developed by Ivan Pavlov 11 However this article was removed from the 1955 reprint of the dictionary After an initial period of doubts Soviet cybernetics took root but this early attitude hampered the development of computing in the Soviet Union History Edit Main article Soviet historiography Soviet historiography the way in which history was and is written by scholars of the Soviet Union 12 was significantly influenced by the strict control by the authorities aimed at propaganda of communist ideology and Soviet power Since the late 1930s Soviet historiography treated the party line and reality as one and the same 13 As such if it was a science it was a science in service of a specific political and ideological agenda commonly employing historical negationist methods 14 In the 1930s historic archives were closed and original research was severely restricted Historians were required to pepper their works with references appropriate or not to Stalin and other Marxist Leninist classics and to pass judgment as prescribed by the Party on pre revolution historic Russian figures 15 Many works of Western historians were forbidden or censored many areas of history were also forbidden for research as officially they never happened 16 Translations of foreign historiography were often produced in a truncated form accompanied with extensive censorship and corrective footnotes citation needed For example in the Russian 1976 translation of Basil Liddell Hart s History of the Second World War pre war purges of Red Army officers the secret protocol to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact many details of the Winter War the occupation of the Baltic states the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina Western Allied assistance to the Soviet Union during the war many other Western Allies efforts the Soviet leadership s mistakes and failures criticism of the Soviet Union and other content were censored out 17 The Katyn massacre was formally assigned to Nazi Germany but the subject was frequently concealed Soviet famines were taboo citation needed Linguistics Edit At the beginning of Stalin s rule the dominant figure in Soviet linguistics was Nikolai Yakovlevich Marr who argued that language is a class construction and that language structure is determined by the economic structure of society 18 Stalin who had previously written about language policy as People s Commissar for Nationalities read a letter by Arnold Chikobava criticizing the theory He summoned Chikobava to a dinner that lasted from 9 p m to 7 a m taking notes diligently 19 In this way he grasped enough of the underlying issues to oppose this simplistic Marxist formalism ending Marr s ideological dominance over Soviet linguistics Stalin s principal work in the field was a small essay Marxism and Linguistic Questions 20 Pedology Edit Pedology was a popular area of research on the basis of numerous orphanages created after the Russian Civil War Soviet pedology was a combination of pedagogy and psychology of human development that heavily relied on various tests It was officially banned in 1936 after a special decree of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union On Pedolodical Perversions in the Narkompros System on July 4 1936 Physics Edit In the late 1940s some areas of physics especially quantum mechanics but also special and general relativity were also criticized on grounds of idealism Soviet physicists such as K V Nikolskij and D Blokhintzev developed a version of the statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics which was seen as more adhering to the principles of dialectical materialism 21 22 However although initially planned 23 this process did not go as far as defining an ideologically correct version of physics and purging those scientists who refused to conform to it because this was recognized as potentially too harmful to the Soviet nuclear program 24 25 As Krylov writes on the perils of ideological intrusion into science Stalin rolled back the planned campaign against physics and instructed Beria to give physicists some space this led to significant advances and accomplishments by Soviet scientists in several domains However neither Stalin nor the subsequent Soviet leaders were able to let go of the controls completely Government control over science turned out to be a grand failure and the attempt to patch the widening gap between the West and the East by espionage did not help Today Russia is hopelessly behind the West in both technology and quality of life 26 Sociology Edit After the Russian Revolution sociology was gradually politicized Bolshevisized and eventually Stalinized 27 From 1930s to 1950s the discipline virtually ceased to exist in the Soviet Union 27 Even in the era where it was allowed to be practiced and not replaced by Marxist philosophy it was always dominated by Marxist thought hence sociology in the Soviet Union and the entire Eastern Bloc represented to a significant extent only one branch of sociology Marxist sociology 27 With the death of Joseph Stalin and the 20th Party Congress in 1956 restrictions on sociological research were somewhat eased and finally after the 23rd Party Congress in 1966 sociology in Soviet Union was once again officially recognized as an acceptable branch of science 28 Statistics Edit The quality accuracy and reliability of data published in the Soviet Union and used in historical research is another issue raised by various Sovietologists 29 30 31 32 The Marxist theoreticians of the Party considered statistics as a social science hence many applications of statistical mathematics were curtailed particularly during the Stalin era 33 Under central planning nothing could occur by accident 33 The law of large numbers and the idea of random deviation were decreed as false theories 33 Statistical journals and university departments were closed world renowned statisticians like Andrey Kolmogorov and Eugen Slutsky abandoned statistical research 33 As with all Soviet historiography reliability of Soviet statistical data varied from period to period 32 The first revolutionary decade and the period of Stalin s dictatorship both appear highly problematic with regards to statistical reliability very little statistical data was published from 1936 to 1956 see Soviet Census 1937 32 The reliability of data improved after 1956 when some missing data was published and Soviet experts themselves published some adjusted data for Stalin s era 32 however the quality of documentation deteriorated 31 While on occasion statistical data useful in historical research might have been completely invented by the Soviet authorities 30 there is little evidence that most statistics were significantly affected by falsification or insertion of false data with the intent to confound the West 31 Data was however falsified both during collection by local authorities who would be judged by the central authorities based on whether their figures reflected the central economy prescriptions and by internal propaganda with its goal to portray the Soviet state in most positive light to its very citizens 29 32 Nonetheless the policy of not publishing or simply not collecting data that was deemed unsuitable for various reasons was much more common than simple falsification hence there are many gaps in Soviet statistical data 31 Inadequate or lacking documentation for much of Soviet statistical data is also a significant problem 29 31 32 Theme in literature EditVladimir Dudintsev The White Robes 1987 a 1988 USSR State Prize a fictionalized version of the devastation which Lysenko wreaked on Soviet genetic studySee also EditAcademic freedom Antiscience Anti intellectualism Censorship in the Soviet Union Deutsche Physik Historical revisionism negationism Political correctness Politicization of science Science and technology in the Soviet Union Scientific freedom Soviet historiography Alexander Veselovsky a case of suppressed literary research Stalin and the ScientistsReferences Edit a b Loren R Graham 2004 Science in Russia and the Soviet Union A Short History Series Cambridge Studies in the History of Science Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 28789 0 Loren R Graham Science and philosophy in the Soviet Union New York 1972 ISBN missing Mark Walker 2002 Science and Ideology A Comparative History Series Routledge Studies in the History of Science Technology and Medicine Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 27122 6 Hudson P S and R H Richens The New Genetics in the Soviet Union Cambridge UK English School of Agriculture 1946 Isis Volume 37 History of Science Society Academie internationale d histoire des sciences 1947 Retrieved 2007 10 18 The fact that Mendel was a priest has been similarly used to discredit his ideas Eugenics Galton and After Duckworth 1952 Retrieved 2007 10 18 Was not Mendel a priest If as the reactionaries maintain genetic processes are subject to the laws of chance George Aiken Taylor 1972 The Presbyterian Journal Volume 31 Southern Presbyterian Journal Co Retrieved 2007 10 18 Mendel of course must be discredited in Communist thought because he was a product of the West and of the Church The Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy Volumes 23 27 Australasian Association of Psychology and Philosophy 1945 Retrieved 2007 10 18 He trenchantly criticises Lysenko s vilification of the work of Mendel and Morgan as fascist bourgeois capitalistic and inspired by clerics that Mendel was a priest is taken as sufficient to discredit his experiments Gregor Mendel And the Roots of Genetics Edward Edelson p 14 Lysenko won the support of Joseph Stalin the ruthless Soviet dictator and Mendel s rules were officially outlawed in the Soviet Union and the Eastern European Countries that it controlled at that time Under Communism the Mendel Museum in his monastery was closed Windholz G 1997 1950 Joint Scientific Session Pavlovians as the accusers and the accused J Hist Behav Sci 33 61 81 Kibernetika Kratkij filosofskij slovar pod redakciej M Rozentalya i P Yudina izdanie 4 dopolnennoe i ispravlennoe Gosudarstvennoe izdatelstvo politicheskoj literatury 1954 It is not the history of the Soviet Union See definitions of historiography for more details Taisia Osipova Peasant rebellions Origin Scope Design and Consequences in Vladimir N Brovkin ed The Bolsheviks in Russian Society The Revolution and the Civil Wars Yale University Press 1997 ISBN 0 300 06706 2 Google Print pp 154 76 Roger D Markwick Donald J Raleigh Rewriting History in Soviet Russia The Politics of Revisionist Historiography Palgrave Macmillan 2001 ISBN 0 333 79209 2 Google Print pp 4 5 John L H Keep A History of the Soviet Union 1945 1991 Last of the Empires pap 30 31 Ferro Marc 2003 The Use and Abuse of History Or How the Past Is Taught to Children London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28592 6 See Chapters 8 Aspects and variations of Soviet history and 10 History in profile Poland Lewis B E 1977 Soviet Taboo Vtoraya Mirovaya Voina History of the Second World War by B Liddel Gart B Liddell Hart Soviet Studies Taylor amp Francis 29 4 603 6 doi 10 1080 09668137708411159 ISSN 0038 5859 JSTOR 150540 Lahteenmaki Mika 1 July 2006 Nikolai Marr and the idea of a unified language Language amp Communication 26 3 285 295 doi 10 1016 j langcom 2006 02 006 ISSN 0271 5309 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Montefiore p 638 Phoenix Reprinted paperback Joseph V Stalin 1950 06 20 Concerning Marxism in Linguistics Pravda Available online as Marxism and Problems of Linguistics including other articles and letters also published in Pravda soon after February 8 and July 4 1950 Olival Freire Jr Marxism and the Quantum Controversy Responding to Max Jammer s Question Archived 2012 11 14 at the Wayback Machine Peter Szegedi Cold War and Interpretations in Quantum Mechanics Ethan Pollock 2006 Stalin and the Soviet Science Wars Princeton University Press Archived from the original on 2010 07 02 Josephson P R 2005 Totalitarian Science and Technology Amherst NY Humanity Books Graham L R 1991 Science Philosophy and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union Columbia University Press Krylov Anna I 2021 06 10 The Peril of Politicizing Science The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 12 22 5371 5376 doi 10 1021 acs jpclett 1c01475 PMID 34107688 a b c Elizabeth Ann Weinberg The Development of Sociology in the Soviet Union Taylor amp Francis 1974 ISBN 0 7100 7876 5 Google Print pp 8 9 Elizabeth Ann Weinberg The Development of Sociology in the Soviet Union p 11 a b c Nicholas Eberstadt and Daniel Patrick Moynihan The Tyranny of Numbers Mismeasurement and Misrule American EnterpriseInstitute 1995 ISBN 0 8447 3764 X Google Print p 138 140 a b Robert Conquest Reflections on a Ravaged Century 2000 ISBN 0 393 04818 7 page 101 a b c d e Edward A Hewett Reforming the Soviet Economy Equality Versus Efficiency Brookings Institution Press 1988 ISBN 0 8157 3603 7 Google Print p 7 and following chapters a b c d e f Nikolai M Dronin Edward G Bellinger Climate Dependence And Food Problems In Russia 1900 1990 Central European University Press 2005 ISBN 963 7326 10 3 Google Print pp 15 16 a b c d David S Salsburg The Lady Tasting Tea How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century Owl Books 2001 ISBN 0 8050 7134 2 Google Print pp 147 149 Ya V Vasilkov M Yu Sorokina eds Lyudi i sudby Biobibliograficheskij slovar vostokovedov zhertv politicheskogo terrora v sovetskij period 1917 1991 People and Destiny Bio Bibliographic Dictionary of Orientalists Victims of the political terror during the Soviet period 1917 1991 Peterburgskoe Vostokovedenie 2003 online edition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Censorship of science in the Soviet Union amp oldid 1106768345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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