“…Whereas here we concentrate on the NSF and its relationship with the social sciences, we should note that, even before the federal government entered as a patron, private philanthropical foundations, such as the Carnegie Foundation, founded in 1905, the Russell Sage Foundation, established in 1907, and the Ford Foundation, set up in 1936, supported the social sciences, as well as research universities in general (Geiger, , ). A prominent role among these philanthropies was played by the Rockefeller Foundation (in particular, the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, founded in 1918), which has drawn a great deal of scholarly attention (Ahmad, ; Bulmer, , a; Bulmer & Bulmer, ; Fisher, , ; Kohler, ; Seim, ), with somewhat controversial conclusions. On the one side, the Rockefeller philanthropies were seen as representing an extension of the interests of the American capitalist class into the social sciences (Fisher, ), whereas other researchers emphasized that the sponsored social scientists maintained a high degree of autonomy (Bulmer, ; Platt, , 1996b).…”