A data-driven look at Max Planck’s provocative idea
In the early 20th century, the physicist Max Planck made an observation that still unsettles scientists today:
New scientific truths don’t win by convincing opponents—but because opponents eventually die, and a new generation takes over.
Over time, this sharpened into the famous line:
“Science advances one funeral at a time.”
It sounds cynical—almost anti-scientific. After all, aren’t scientists supposed to follow evidence wherever it leads?
But what if Planck was, at least partly, right?
A modern study published in the American Economic Review takes this idea out of philosophy and into data—and the results are surprisingly striking.
π The natural experiment: what happens when a “giant” dies?
The study (by Azoulay, Fons-Rosen, and Graff Zivin, 2019) looked at what happens in scientific fields when a highly influential (“star”) scientist dies unexpectedly.
Why is this powerful?
- Death acts as a kind of natural experiment
- It abruptly removes a dominant figure from a field
- It lets us observe how the field changes because of that absence
The researchers tracked:
- Publication patterns
- Citation impact
- Entry of new scientists
- Direction of ideas
π What they found (this is where it gets interesting)
1. πͺ New scientists enter—but they’re different
After a star scientist’s death:
- There is a significant increase in new entrants into that field
- These newcomers are often not from the star’s immediate network
π Translation:
While the star was alive, the field was somewhat “closed.” After their death, it opens up.
2. π‘ The ideas shift
The new entrants don’t just continue the old work.
They:
- Pursue different questions
- Use different methods
- Challenge previously dominant assumptions
π This suggests that dominant scientists don’t just lead fields—they also shape what is considered acceptable to study.
3. π Impact actually increases
This is the most striking result:
- Papers by these new entrants are more likely to be highly cited
- The field sees a boost in high-impact contributions
π In other words:
Innovation accelerates after the dominant figure is gone.
4. π§± Before death: subtle suppression
The study suggests (carefully, but clearly) that while star scientists are alive:
- They may unintentionally discourage alternative ideas
- Their influence over peer review, funding, and hiring can shape the direction of research
- Competing approaches may be underexplored
This isn’t about malice—it’s about intellectual dominance.
π§ So was Planck right?
Partly—but the data lets us refine his idea.
Planck imagined stubborn old scientists refusing to change their minds.
The modern evidence suggests something more nuanced:
Scientific fields are shaped by power structures, networks, and intellectual gatekeeping—not just individual stubbornness.
It’s less about people refusing to believe new ideas, and more about:
- Who controls journals
- Who trains students
- Who decides what gets funded
π¬ A better interpretation
Instead of:
“Science progresses because old scientists die”
A more accurate, data-driven version would be:
Science progresses when intellectual monopolies weaken, allowing new ideas and new people to enter.
Death is just one way that monopoly ends.
𧬠Why this matters today
This insight is deeply relevant to modern science:
1. Large labs and “celebrity scientists”
Fields dominated by a few powerful labs may:
- Define what counts as “important”
- Crowd out alternative approaches
2. Peer review and funding bias
Reviewers (often established experts) may:
- Favor familiar frameworks
- Be skeptical of disruptive ideas
3. Training pipelines
Students trained in a dominant paradigm:
- Often inherit the worldview of their mentors
- Reinforce the existing structure
⚖️ The uncomfortable truth
Science is often portrayed as:
A pure meritocracy of ideas
But the evidence shows it is also:
A social system, shaped by hierarchy, influence, and human psychology
This doesn’t invalidate science—it makes it more realistic.
π± The hopeful ending
Here’s the encouraging part:
Even if Planck was partly right, science still progresses.
Not just because of funerals—but because of:
- New generations
- New tools
- New perspectives
- And sometimes, bold outsiders willing to challenge the norm
π Final takeaway
Planck’s quote endures because it captures a tension at the heart of science:
- Science is self-correcting
- But the correction is often slower and more human than we like to admit
So yes—sometimes science advances one funeral at a time.
But more precisely:
It advances when space is created for new ideas to breathe.