In consequence, science is more important than ever for industrial technology.
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Interpretation
The sentence asserts a tightening feedback loop between basic scientific research and practical industrial innovation. “In consequence” implies a preceding argument—likely about increasing complexity of modern production, materials, electronics, or energy systems—leading to the conclusion that industry can no longer rely chiefly on craft knowledge or incremental tinkering. Instead, advances in industrial technology depend more directly on scientific understanding (theories, measurement, and experimental methods) to design, optimize, and scale new processes. The claim also carries a policy implication: sustained investment in science (education, laboratories, and fundamental research) is not a luxury but a prerequisite for industrial competitiveness and technological progress.


