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日期: 2026/04/14
時間: 10:00~12:00
地點: 檔案館第三會議室
主持人: 傅家倩教授(中研院近史所副研究員)
主講人:馬克文Coleman R. Mahler博士(捷克查理大學東亞地緣政治博士後研究)
主辦單位: 西學與中國研究群
Abstract: This article examines Taiwan’s abortive bid to participate in constructing the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) in Waxahachie, Texas in the early 1990s. To help pay for the construction of the $8 billion particle accelerator, slated to be the world’s largest, project organizers and the US government solicited the help of numerous foreign governments, including Taiwan. Partly through the mediation of Chinese-American scientists like the Nobel-winning theoretical physicist T.D. Lee and head of Academia Sinica Wu Ta-you, Taiwan’s government initially expressed its intent to participate by producing a crucial component: the GEM Central Tracker. However, this quickly ignited a public firestorm over the project’s costs and scientific contribution, ultimately resulting in the cancellation of Taiwan’s participation in February-March 1993. This article uses archival materials from Academia Sinica to excavate the roots of this controversy, and to articulate the politics of science in late-Cold War East Asia. I argue that the collapse of the project reflected new instabilities in Taiwan’s scientific policymaking caused by three factors: the rise of Sino-US scientific cooperation, the decline in the prestige of high-energy physics, and the erosion of technocracy caused by Taiwan’s recent democratization. Within a new and volatile mass-media landscape, personal and professional grievances were publicly aired, preventing the formation of policy consensus.