Perhaps I should not post this message here because one of these fellows might be thinking of calling me back, and this might upset him . . .

I have been contacted by venture capitalists from time to time, more often after the 60 Minutes program. Several researchers I know have also been contacted. The conversation may be short or long but boiled down to its essence it is a Repeat Until loop with the condition Until True=False. It goes something like this:

V.C.: If you can show me a cell that produces steady heat in a controlled reaction, I can get you lots of money.

Me: If I had a cell that did that, I wouldn't need your money.

V.C.: What will it take to make a cell like that?

Me: Money. We need money to get from where we are now to the steady, controlled reaction.

V.C.: How would you do it? Which researcher knows how to do it?

Me: We don't know how to do it. The purpose of research is to find out. All of the researchers think they know how to do it. Otherwise they would not be doing the research. Until one of them succeeds it will be impossible to say whether he or she really knows. I have my opinions about which ones are closer to success, but I may be wrong.

V.C.: But isn't there a risk that we might back the wrong person?

Me: Yes, that's why it is called "venture" capitalism. A venture is "a business enterprise involving some risk in expectation of gain."

And so on . . .

I think some of these people are looking for a sure thing, not a risk. They do not know much about science or R&D, or they would not be asking such questions. What they really want is to get in early in financial trickery such as a dot-com stock (a.k.a. tulipmania or the Greater Fool principle), or to place a bet you are likely to win unless everyone else also places it, such as derivatives ("financial weapons of mass destruction" and "contracts devised by madmen" - W. Buffett, 2003).

McKubre has described skeptics who do not understand that a large, controlled reaction is the goal of the research. It is the end point, not the starting point. They would make funding "contingent upon success" in the sense that you have to finish the job before you start it. As I said this calls for a time machine or finding a suitcase full of money.

One other exchange often occurs during these conversations:

V.C.: What about intellectual property?

Me: Unfortunately, the US Patent Office will not allow it.

That usually ends the conversation abruptly.

- Jed

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