The Missing Step
Author(s):
Adapted from a scenario by Albert R. Meyer
Student A was delighted when, in his final year in grad school, a joint paper with his faculty thesis supervisor, Professor B, was accepted at a competitive symposium in Theoretical Computer Science. The paper sketched the proof of a conjecture in complexity theory which had been the subject of a half-dozen prior papers. Student A's presentation was heard favorably by experts at the symposium, and afterward Student A began the detailed write-up of the proof for inclusion in his thesis.
But now, midway through the write-up, he realizes he cannot prove an essential lemma which had earlier seemed routine to both him and Carol. He tells Professor B, and after a couple of days' work they realize that they had overlooked a serious lacuna in the proof when they published their symposium paper.
Professor B says they are obligated to publish an erratum in the following year's symposium volume. The deadline for submissions to next year's volume has formally just passed, but Professor B thinks they can still squeeze the erratum in if they mail it promptly. Student A thinks that with a few more weeks to think about it, he might be able to fill the lacuna.
What are Professor B and Student A's responsibilities to report the gap in their proof?
If Professor B and Student A disagree about responding, how might they resolve this disagreement?
Cite this page:
Adapted from a scenario by Albert R. Meyer
"The Missing Step"
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
9/10/2006 9:01:32 PM
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Friday, August 29, 2008
<www.onlineethics.org/CMS/research/modindex/resethpages/missing.aspx>