Thursday, April 30, 2026

Quantification of science

Chapter 2 of my book, The Quantification of History and the Future of the Western World, is dedicated to quantifying science, something I had done in the introduction to my dictionary, 1.000 grandes científicos (1,000 Great Scientists, Editorial Espasa, 1996), although in this new book I have introduced new tables and figures, and expanded upon the analyses carried out there. Here I will summarize some of the results of this chapter.

The following table shows the list of the 24 greatest scientists in the history of Greco-Roman and Western civilizations. The complete study considers the names of 1,000 scientists, who have been ordered according to the number of lines dedicated to them in the sources and encyclopedias used as the basis for the selection. Personally, I don't agree with all the results, but if I were to give in to the temptation to alter them at any point, that would have been an end to the objectivity I was seeking.

The best scientists in history

Score

Dates

Scientist

8 points

c469- 399 B.C.

Socrates

c427-c347 B.C.

Plato

 384- 322 B.C.

Aristotle

1596-1650

Descartes, René

1642-1727

Newton, Isaac

1809-1882

Darwin, Charles Robert

1856-1939

Freud, Sigmund

1879-1955

Einstein, Albert

7 points

1452-1519

Leonardo da Vinci

1646-1716

Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von

1791-1867

Faraday, Michael

1822-1895

Pasteur, Louis

1847-1931

Edison, Thomas Alva

1885-1962

Bohr, Niels Henrik David

6 points

c460-c377 B.C.

Hipócrates

c287- 212 B.C.

Archimede

1473-1543

Copernic, Nicolaus

1561-1626

Bacon, Francis

1564-1642

Galileo Galilei

1706-1790

Franklin, Benjamin

1824-1907

Kelvin (William Thomson), Lord

1743-1794

Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent

1623-1662

Pascal, Blaise

1872-1970

Russell, Bertrand

 

The eight names with the highest rating seem indisputable: the three great Greek philosophers, who were also the founders of Greek science, along with five great Western scientists: Descartes, Newton, Darwin, Freud, and Einstein.

The following two figures show the overall evolution of science over 2,650 years. The first figure shows the first 2,100 years (ancient and medieval science) in century intervals. The second shows the last 550 years in quarter-century intervals.

Observing these figures reveals that modern Western science has not developed continuously: its evolution shows a considerable decline for half a century, between 1651 and 1700, corresponding to the scientists who flourished during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The same phenomenon is also observed in Greek science, where there is a clear major period (5th, 4th, and 3rd centuries BC), with a secondary period centered on the 2nd century AD. Regarding the decline in scientific research during the 20th century, this is due to the scarcity of data for that period in the sources consulted, making the decline more apparent than real.

The book also analyzes the distribution of scientists by country and by field of study. It is shown that different countries have replaced one another during history. For example, at the beginning of the 20th century, Germany was the dominant country in science, and physics was the most practiced science. By the end of the 20th century, the United States was the dominant country, and medicine and biology were the fields with most researchers and discoveries.

Research themes between 1985 and 2009

Science

Math.

Phys.

Astro.

Chem.

Geol.

Biol.

Med.

Tecno.

TOTAL

Nr. Papers

190

886

2.755

429

1.627

5.859

7.349

2.015

21.110

 

Can we deduce something about the future evolution of science? The outlook for Western Europe seems bleak. Extrapolating current trends leads us to conclude that science is in decline in most of Europe. As for the United States, which currently holds first place, there are some alarming signs. Are we perhaps heading toward a science dominated by Asiatic countries?

The same post in Spanish

Thematic Thread on Science and History: Previous Next

Manuel Alfonseca

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