Friday, July 17, 2026

When a Theory Becomes an A Priori Assumption

Gould’s sharpest warning about substantive uniformitarianism is not simply that it is wrong. It is that, when held too rigidly, it becomes “an a priori assumption.” That phrase is small but dangerous. It means that a theory about nature has stopped waiting for nature’s testimony. It has become a prior condition, a filter through which evidence must pass before it is allowed to look plausible.

The danger is not unique to geology. Every successful theory wants to become a habit. First it explains. Then it organizes. Then it teaches the next generation where to look. Eventually, if no one is careful, it begins deciding in advance what kinds of answers are respectable. At that point, science has not become unscientific exactly, but it has become cramped. The windows are still there, but someone has painted landscapes over them.

Gould says substantive uniformitarianism can be “stifling to the formulation of new hypotheses.” The word “stifling” is especially apt. It suggests that the problem is not a single false conclusion. It is a shortage of conceptual air. Researchers may not even propose certain ideas because the doctrine has already made them feel excessive, undisciplined, or unsuitably dramatic.

Gould gives an example from polar wandering. 

“Polar wandering” usually refers to true polar wander (TPW) — a geophysical process in which the entire solid outer Earth (the crust and mantle together) slowly reorients relative to the planet’s rotation axis. In simpler terms, the continents and mantle shift together so that different parts of Earth move closer to or farther from the geographic poles.

He cites a modern supporter of substantive uniformitarianism who described the idea of polar wandering through relatively short spurts as “heady wine” for the paleogeographer. Gould’s response is wonderfully sober. It is “preferable to judge this proposal on its own merit” rather than by reference to “a preconceived idea of nature’s course.” The issue is not whether polar wandering, in that particular form, is true. The issue is how one decides whether it deserves consideration.

Earth rotates like a spinning top. A rotating body tends to stabilize with its largest mass distributed around the equator. If huge mass imbalances develop inside Earth — for example from:

    • mantle convection,
    • superplumes,
    • massive volcanic provinces,
    • subducting slabs,

then the planet can slowly “roll” to place the excess mass in a more stable orientation.

The spin axis in space stays almost fixed, but the solid Earth shifts around it.

This distinction matters immensely. A scientific community needs standards. It should not chase every glittering speculation down the canyon. But standards must be evidentiary, not aesthetic. A hypothesis should not be rejected because it sounds too sudden, too large, too disruptive, or too unlike a disciplinary ancestor’s preferred world. It should be tested against data, mechanism, coherence, and explanatory power.

The phrase “preconceived idea of nature’s course” is one of Gould’s most useful warnings. Nature has no duty to match our intellectual temperament. Some scientists prefer continuity, others rupture. Some trust gradual accumulation, others are drawn to thresholds. Some fear speculation, others fear conservatism. These temperaments can be productive, but none should be smuggled into method as if it were evidence.

Evidence for polar wandering

Scientists infer polar wandering from:

      • ancient magnetic signatures preserved in rocks (paleomagnetism),
      • fossil climate distributions,
      • sediment patterns,
      • orientation of ancient glacial deposits.

When rocks form, magnetic minerals align with Earth’s magnetic field. Measuring those orientations allows reconstruction of where continents and poles were in the past.

Substantive uniformitarianism began as a corrective to excessive catastrophe. That matters. It was not born as a villain. Lyell’s insistence on slow natural process helped protect geology from extravagant, poorly constrained explanations. It made scientists ask whether ordinary causes, acting over deep time, could produce extraordinary results. That was a triumph of disciplined imagination.

But a corrective can overcorrect. If geologists become so committed to gradual rates that they instinctively distrust rapid change, then the theory has become a gatekeeper. Evidence for rare high-magnitude events may be downplayed. Gaps in the record may be forced into continuity. Abrupt transitions may be explained away. The past becomes not what evidence suggests, but what doctrine permits.

How fast is it?

True polar wander is usually very slow:

      • typically a few degrees over millions of years,
      • though some hypotheses suggest episodes of faster reorientation in Earth’s history.

Modern measurements also show tiny ongoing shifts in Earth’s rotational orientation due to:

      •  melting ice sheets,
      • groundwater extraction,
      • mantle dynamics.

This dynamic appears in many sciences. In biology, adaptationist expectations can make non-adaptive explanations look insufficiently interesting. In economics, equilibrium assumptions can make instability seem anomalous rather than central. In climate science, linear expectations can underplay abrupt transitions. In medicine, dominant disease models can delay recognition of complex or multi-causal conditions. Gould’s point travels well: a successful framework becomes dangerous when it starts functioning as an imagination tax.

The solution is not to abandon theoretical frameworks. Science cannot operate as a pile of facts with no architecture. Theories are necessary. They tell researchers what to measure, how to compare, what anomalies matter, and which explanations are worth developing. The problem arises when a framework ceases to be revisable. A theory should be a scaffold, not a courthouse.

Gould’s article is therefore a defense of hypothesis formation. That may be its most radical feature. He is not merely asking geologists to update a definition. He is asking them to protect the conditions under which new ideas can be born. Before evidence can confirm or reject a hypothesis, someone must be allowed to imagine it. If substantive uniformitarianism makes certain patterns unthinkable in advance, it harms science upstream, at the point where inquiry first becomes possible.

A simple analogy

Imagine spinning a slightly uneven basketball with stickers on it:

      • if weight inside the ball redistributes,
      • the ball may slowly rotate to a new stable orientation,
      • even though the spin direction stays the same.

The stickers (continents) would all move together relative to the spin axis.

This concept is important in:

      • geology,
      • paleoclimatology,
      • planetary science,
      • and studies of Earth’s deep interior evolution.

A serious post on this theme should also acknowledge the counterargument. Without some prior expectations, science becomes chaotic. Researchers need background assumptions to avoid drowning in possibility. Methodological conservatism can be useful. It prevents wild speculation from consuming attention. It asks whether known processes suffice before inventing unknown ones. Gould himself accepts a simplicity principle, warning against “unnecessary theoretical processes.”

So the challenge is balance. How does science remain open without becoming gullible? How does it remain disciplined without becoming doctrinaire? Gould’s answer lies in separating method from substance. Keep the methodological commitment to natural law. Keep the simplicity principle. Keep the preference for observable causes when they explain the evidence. But do not add an extra rule that nature’s rates and conditions must resemble a Lyellian expectation of gradualism.

This is an elegant balance. It lets scientists say no to fantasy without saying no to catastrophe. It lets them demand natural mechanisms without demanding uniform pace. It lets them treat a dramatic hypothesis as legitimate if it is lawful, testable, and evidentially grounded.

The phrase “a priori assumption” should haunt every mature discipline. It asks whether a cherished theory is still listening. It asks whether students are learning a tool or inheriting a taboo. It asks whether anomalies are being investigated or domesticated. It asks whether the field’s imagination has become narrower than its evidence.

Gould’s essay invites geology to breathe. Let slow causes remain powerful. Let ordinary processes remain central. But let the record of the Earth unsettle inherited expectations. If the rocks indicate pulses, listen. If fossils show uneven histories, listen. If climate archives reveal abruptness, listen. If a hypothesis sounds like “heady wine,” do not reject it for intoxication alone. Test the vintage.

A theory becomes dangerous not when it is wrong, but when it becomes too comfortable to question. Gould’s great service is to catch substantive uniformitarianism at precisely that point: historically honorable, scientifically influential, but at risk of becoming a velvet rope around nature’s more unruly possibilities

How Long Is a Biology PhD Thesis? From 43 Pages of Maize to 256 Scanned Images of Protein

 A biology thesis is not merely a stack of pages. It is a habitat.

A molecular-biology thesis may be crowded with gels, blots and pathway diagrams. An ecology thesis may stretch across seasons, field sites and species lists. A bioinformatics dissertation can appear compact until its code, datasets and supplementary files are counted. A taxonomic thesis may resemble a museum catalogue crossed with a detective novel.

This makes biology especially resistant to one universal answer to the question: How long should a PhD thesis be?

Some celebrated biological dissertations were unexpectedly brief. Others were substantial but not enormous. In several famous cases, the exact page count is difficult to establish because the surviving object may be a journal publication, a later monograph, a library scan or a set of digitized images rather than the original numbered dissertation.

The page, it turns out, is a slippery little unit. One page may contain three equations. Another may contain a photographic plate of twenty specimens. A third may consist almost entirely of the words “no significant difference.”

A small gallery of famous biology theses

ScientistAreaDissertationWhat can be verified
Barbara McClintockCytogenetics and plant geneticsA Cytological and Genetical Study of Triploid MaizeThe published version of her 1927 PhD thesis occupies pages 180–222, or 43 journal pages
James D. WatsonGenetics and virologyThe Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated BacteriophageApproximately 92 pages
Francis CrickStructural biology and biophysicsPolypeptides and Proteins: X-Ray StudiesThe Wellcome digital record contains 256 images, not necessarily 256 numbered pages
Jane GoodallEthology and primatologyBehaviour of Free-living ChimpanzeesExact dissertation pagination is not openly available; the thesis-derived publication occupies about 151 numbered pages, plus inserts
Rosalind FranklinPhysical chemistry and biological structural scienceThe Physical Chemistry of Solid Organic Colloids with Special Reference to CoalThe title and degree are documented, but a dependable open page count is difficult to verify

These examples cannot be compared as though they were identical books placed on the same scale. They emerged from different periods, institutions, research cultures and subfields. Nevertheless, together they reveal how the architecture of a biological thesis changes with the kind of evidence it must carry.

Barbara McClintock: 43 pages of maize chromosomes

Barbara McClintock completed her PhD at Cornell University in 1927. Her doctoral research concerned the chromosomes of triploid maize, plants carrying three sets of chromosomes rather than the usual two.

A version published in Genetics in 1929 is explicitly identified as the publication of her doctoral thesis. It runs from pages 180 to 222, giving it a length of 43 journal pages. That figure should be described as the length of the published thesis version, not automatically as the pagination of the original bound dissertation.

Forty-three pages may sound astonishingly small for work connected to one of the great careers in genetics. Yet McClintock’s subject lent itself to concentrated presentation. The thesis was built around cytological observation: chromosomes, their configurations and their behaviour during cell division.

Early cytogenetics did not require the enormous methodological infrastructure expected of a modern genomics dissertation. There were no sequencing pipelines, software repositories, data-management plans or multi-omics appendices. The microscope produced observations that could be organized into drawings, tables and arguments.

That does not mean the research was simple. Producing reliable maize material, identifying chromosomal configurations and interpreting them correctly required formidable technical skill. The final text was short because the intellectual structure was focused, not because the work was lightweight.

McClintock’s example illustrates a recurring principle: visual evidence can compress years of biological labour into surprisingly few printed pages.

James Watson: 92 pages before DNA

James Watson’s doctoral dissertation was completed at Indiana University in 1950 under the supervision of Salvador Luria. Its title was The Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated Bacteriophage. Indiana University preserves a digitized version, and contemporary descriptions identify it as a thesis of roughly 92 pages.

The subject was bacteriophage, viruses that infect bacteria. Watson investigated what happened to their biological properties after exposure to X-rays. This work belonged to the phage tradition that helped transform genetics into molecular biology.

Watson’s thesis was not about the double helix. It did not reveal the structure of DNA, which came several years later. Instead, it shows a young scientist learning to ask experimentally manageable questions about heredity, radiation and viral reproduction.

At 92 pages, it was short by many present-day standards but not tiny. It had to describe experimental treatments, biological assays and interpretations. Still, the thesis revolved around one tightly bounded problem rather than being assembled from several semi-independent projects.

Many modern experimental biology dissertations are longer because doctoral students are expected to develop multiple studies, publish several papers, document detailed protocols and provide extensive statistical analyses. Watson’s thesis came from a period when the doctorate could more readily be organized around one principal experimental question.

Francis Crick: when a “page” becomes an archival puzzle

Francis Crick’s Cambridge dissertation was titled Polypeptides and Proteins: X-Ray Studies. He submitted it in 1953 and received his PhD in 1954. The Wellcome Collection’s digitized record contains 256 images of the bound volume.

It is tempting to report this as a 256-page thesis, but that would be too confident. A digital “image” can represent a cover, blank leaf, title page, photographic plate, folded figure or numbered text page. Archive interfaces count scanned objects, not necessarily the pagination a reader would see in the original volume.

Crick’s dissertation belonged to the world of X-ray crystallography and protein structure. Such theses often become image-heavy because their evidence includes diffraction patterns, molecular models, geometrical interpretations and calculations.

A structural-biology thesis may therefore contain relatively little continuous prose while still becoming a large physical object. Its burden of proof is partly visual and mathematical. A single diffraction image can carry more scientific information than several pages of verbal description, although it may require several more pages to explain what anyone is looking at.

Crick’s case teaches a broader lesson: digital size, physical thickness and intellectual length are different quantities.

Jane Goodall: when the field site enters the thesis

Jane Goodall submitted Behaviour of Free-living Chimpanzees at the University of Cambridge. The Cambridge repository confirms the dissertation and institutional record, although the original thesis is not openly available for straightforward page counting.

A thesis-derived monograph published in 1968 occupies pages 161–311 of the relevant volume, amounting to approximately 151 numbered pages, along with additional inserted material. This should not be treated as the exact length of the original dissertation, but it gives a sense of the scale of the resulting scholarly account.

Goodall’s work represents a very different biological tradition from McClintock’s cytogenetics or Watson’s virology. Field ethology must preserve context.

Where did an observation occur? Which animal was involved? What was its age, sex and social position? What happened before and afterward? Was the behaviour repeated? Did it vary with season, food availability, reproductive condition or the presence of particular individuals?

A laboratory experiment attempts to control context. A field study often has to document it.

This is one reason behavioural ecology and natural-history theses tend to be narratively longer. The researcher cannot simply report that treatment A increased variable B. The biological meaning may depend on an unfolding sequence of relationships, environments and events.

Field theses also accumulate maps, habitat descriptions, behavioural catalogues, observation schedules and individual life histories. Their length grows not because field biologists enjoy carrying heavier books through airports, but because wild organisms refuse to behave like neat columns in a spreadsheet.

Rosalind Franklin: a famous thesis with an uncertain length

Rosalind Franklin received her PhD from Cambridge in 1945 for a thesis titled The Physical Chemistry of Solid Organic Colloids with Special Reference to Coal. The dissertation predated her famous work on DNA and concerned the structure and porosity of coal and related carbon materials.

A reliable, openly accessible page count is not easily established from the available institutional records. This uncertainty is worth retaining rather than filling the gap with a number repeated on an unsourced website.

Franklin’s case exposes a common problem in lists of famous theses. Historical dissertations are not always digitized. When they are digitized, scans may have different counting conventions. Some have been converted into journal articles, books or collected papers, and the pagination of those later forms is mistakenly attributed to the original thesis.

The responsible answer is sometimes: we know what the thesis was, but not exactly how many pages it contained.

That answer may be less dazzling than a suspiciously precise number, but it is better scholarship.

Why different areas of biology produce differently shaped theses

Biology is one discipline only in the administrative sense. In practice, it contains several cultures of evidence. Each culture builds a different kind of dissertation.

Molecular and cell biology: the figure-driven thesis

A molecular-biology thesis commonly revolves around a sequence of experiments:

  1. A molecule or pathway is identified.
  2. Its expression or localization is measured.
  3. It is disrupted or overexpressed.
  4. The resulting phenotype is examined.
  5. A mechanistic model is proposed.

The resulting thesis often consists of several paper-like chapters. Text may be relatively concise, but figures multiply rapidly: gels, blots, microscopy panels, dose-response curves, flow-cytometry plots and pathway diagrams.

Methods can also become extensive. Cell lines, antibodies, constructs, primers, culture conditions and statistical procedures must be documented carefully. A thesis with 120 pages of main text may be accompanied by a small moon of supplementary protocols and raw data.

The apparent length therefore depends on what the university asks the student to include inside the thesis rather than deposit separately.

Genetics and genomics: when appendices acquire their own weather system

Classical genetics could sometimes be presented with crosses, pedigrees and chromosome observations. Modern genomics generates a different scale of material.

A genomics thesis may involve:

  • hundreds or thousands of genomes;
  • sequence-quality filtering;
  • reference assemblies;
  • annotation pipelines;
  • phylogenetic models;
  • statistical tests;
  • code repositories;
  • supplementary tables with thousands of entries.

The central argument may still fit into a handful of chapters, but reproducibility requires documentation of software versions, parameters, databases and computational workflows.

This creates an odd modern possibility: the printed thesis can become shorter while the complete research object becomes vastly larger. The PDF may contain 150 pages, while the associated data occupy terabytes.

In genomics, page count is a particularly poor measure of research volume. A four-line command can launch an analysis involving billions of nucleotides.

Structural biology and biophysics: pictures, mathematics and instruments

Structural biology sits near the border of biology, chemistry and physics. Its theses may include crystallographic data, diffraction patterns, electron-density maps, spectroscopy, molecular simulations and instrument-specific calculations.

These dissertations are often dense rather than verbally long. Their readers must understand both the biological molecule and the physical technique used to infer its structure.

Crick’s dissertation belongs to this tradition. The archive’s 256 images remind us that structural evidence often travels as plates, graphs and diagrams rather than uninterrupted prose.

A structural-biology thesis may therefore appear shorter than an ecology thesis in word count while demanding more mathematical explanation per page.

Ecology and field biology: time becomes text

Ecological research is shaped by places, populations and seasons. A three-year field project may have only a limited number of sampling windows. Weather can erase a season. Animals migrate. Plants flower according to schedules that show little respect for university deadlines.

Ecological theses often require substantial descriptions of:

  • study sites;
  • sampling design;
  • climatic conditions;
  • species composition;
  • spatial variation;
  • temporal replication;
  • detection limitations;
  • statistical treatment of imperfect observations.

Natural history also matters. When interpreting a pattern, the researcher may need to explain what organisms actually do rather than treating them as interchangeable data points.

Consequently, field biology often produces longer introductions and discussions. Context is not decorative background. It is part of the causal system.

Ethology and primatology: a thesis full of individuals

Animal-behaviour research frequently deals with identifiable individuals rather than anonymous samples. Rank, kinship, age, reproductive state and previous interaction can all influence behaviour.

Goodall’s work illustrates why behavioural theses can become narrative without ceasing to be scientific. A sequence of events may be biologically meaningful in a way that an isolated count is not.

Ethological writing must often move between statistical regularities and individual histories. This produces a hybrid document: part quantitative analysis, part behavioural archive.

Taxonomy and systematics: where length grows specimen by specimen

A taxonomic thesis may contain species descriptions, identification keys, synonymies, specimen lists, type designations, geographical records, illustrations and comparisons with related organisms.

Every newly described species may require several pages of formal treatment. A revision of a large genus can therefore become enormous even if the conceptual question is straightforward.

Such theses are not padded. Their length is cumulative. Each specimen and species adds another brick to a reference structure that future researchers may use for decades.

A concise theoretical insight can be stated once. A taxonomic distinction may need to be documented repeatedly across dozens of organisms.

Evolutionary and theoretical biology: sometimes closer to mathematics

Theoretical population genetics, evolutionary modelling and mathematical biology can produce compact dissertations when the main contribution consists of a model, derivation or proof.

These theses resemble mathematical works more than laboratory notebooks. Their adequacy depends on assumptions, logical consistency and explanatory power rather than the number of experiments conducted.

A theoretical thesis can therefore be short without being narrow. One model may connect phenomena across genetics, ecology and behaviour.

Yet modern theoretical biology increasingly includes simulations and empirical validation, which expand the methods, code and results. Even equations now travel with luggage.

Biomedical and clinical biology: documentation expands the volume

Biomedical theses involving patient samples, cohorts or interventions often require extensive documentation concerning:

  • participant selection;
  • clinical definitions;
  • ethical approval;
  • informed consent;
  • inclusion and exclusion criteria;
  • confounding variables;
  • adverse events;
  • statistical power;
  • data privacy.

The underlying biological question may be simple, but the evidentiary and ethical framework is necessarily elaborate.

Clinical work also tends to involve multidisciplinary collaborations. A thesis may need to explain enough medicine, statistics, molecular biology and epidemiology to remain intelligible across several professional communities.

Countries do not merely change the spelling; they change the thesis

The length of a biology thesis depends not only on the science but also on the academic system in which it is produced.

United Kingdom: the word-limit tradition

British universities commonly specify maximum word counts rather than expected page counts.

The University of Cambridge currently sets a normal maximum of 60,000 words for a PhD thesis in biological sciences, with extension to 80,000 words requiring special permission. Certain elements, including references and some supplementary material, may be treated separately under institutional rules.

Oxford’s Biology DPhil regulations specify a limit of 50,000 words, described as approximately 170 A4 pages, excluding items such as the bibliography, diagrams, tables and appendices.

A word ceiling changes how students write. The thesis becomes an exercise in selection. Data may be moved into appendices, supplementary repositories or published papers. The candidate must decide which parts of the research story are essential for examination.

The British thesis has traditionally been a coherent scholarly argument, even when chapters correspond to publications. It is not simply expected to be every result the student ever generated.

United States: the committee as the measuring instrument

Many American universities do not impose a single institution-wide page or word limit.

Cornell University, for example, states that the content and length of the thesis are determined by the student’s special committee and field requirements. Cornell also permits a “papers option” in approved fields, allowing the dissertation to be organized as a series of research papers.

This produces considerable variation. One American biology thesis may be a traditional monograph. Another may contain three published papers connected by a general introduction and conclusion. A third may include unpublished chapters, long methods sections and supplementary appendices.

The American system therefore places substantial authority in the hands of the supervisory committee. Thesis length becomes a local ecological trait, shaped by the laboratory, department and advisor.

This flexibility can be liberating. It can also produce uncertainty, particularly when students hear that a neighbouring laboratory expects five chapters while their own advisor considers three perfectly adequate.

Sweden: the compilation thesis

In Sweden, the compilation thesis is especially prominent. It consists of a framing document, often called a kappa, together with published or publishable research papers.

Uppsala University’s biology regulations allow either a monograph or a compilation thesis. They also require a popular-science summary in Swedish of at least two pages.

The apparent length of such a thesis depends on what is counted. Is the thesis only the synthesis? Does the count include all appended papers? Are published articles reproduced in their journal layouts?

A Swedish compilation thesis may look very large as a bound volume while containing a comparatively short original synthesis. Its architecture reflects a view of doctoral training in which publication and thesis production are closely intertwined.

The Netherlands: chapters designed for publication

Wageningen University allows doctoral theses to take the form of a monograph or a chapter-based work containing a general introduction, published or publishable chapters and a general discussion.

This structure is particularly compatible with biology, where a doctoral project often generates several related datasets rather than one continuous experiment.

A chapter-based thesis can be long because introductions and methods recur across papers. Conversely, the linking chapters may be concise because the detailed work already appears in the articles.

Dutch theses are also often produced as polished books, sometimes with carefully designed covers and propositions. Physical elegance, however, should not be confused with scientific excess. A beautifully printed thesis may still have a tightly controlled argument hiding beneath its ceremonial feathers.

Denmark: a typical page expectation

Aarhus University’s molecular biology and genetics guidance describes a typical PhD thesis as comprising approximately 100 pages.

This kind of guidance is different from a hard maximum. “Typical” tells the student what the local organism usually looks like, while leaving room for unusual specimens.

It acknowledges disciplinary expectations without pretending that every biological project produces the same volume of evidence.

Germany: rules may change across the corridor

Germany provides a useful warning against speaking too broadly about national traditions. Thesis regulations can differ not only between universities but between faculties within the same university.

At Heidelberg, regulations for the Biosciences Faculty specify a conventional dissertation format and do not permit a cumulative dissertation, while other subject areas may follow different rules.

Thus, one German doctoral candidate may submit a unified monograph, while a colleague in another faculty assembles a publication-based thesis.

The national label is less informative than the faculty ordinance. Academic culture can change faster than the cafeteria menu.

India: milestones may be defined more clearly than page counts

Indian institutions also vary substantially, and it would be misleading to describe one universal Indian thesis format.

At the Indian Institute of Science’s Centre for Ecological Sciences, doctoral regulations emphasize coursework, an advisory committee, a comprehensive examination, annual progress reviews, a thesis colloquium, external examination and an oral defence. The publicly available guidance focuses on the process and expected progress rather than prescribing a universal page count.

This process-oriented model is common in systems where the thesis is only one component of doctoral assessment. The candidate must also demonstrate sustained progress, disciplinary competence and the ability to defend the work before specialists.

In practice, Indian biology theses can range from concise article-based documents to substantial monographs, depending on the institution, laboratory and subfield. The binding may be standardized. The biology inside rarely is.

Why page-count comparisons so often go wrong

The original thesis may not be the document online

McClintock’s 43-page work is a published version of her thesis. Goodall’s accessible publication is derived from her dissertation. A later book may be edited, shortened, expanded or reformatted.

Treating these objects as interchangeable creates false precision.

Numbered pages are not PDF pages

A scan may include covers, blank sheets, certificates, foldouts and handwritten annotations. Crick’s archive contains 256 images, but that does not prove the original thesis had 256 numbered pages.

Article-based theses repeat material

A compilation thesis may reproduce background and methods across several papers. Its total page count can therefore be high even when its original synthesis is brief.

Appendices can conceal a second thesis

Sequence alignments, specimen catalogues, questionnaires, code descriptions and supplementary analyses may sit outside the main pagination. Two theses with the same main-text length can have radically different evidentiary mass.

Formatting can manufacture length

Font size, margins, line spacing, figure placement and reference style can turn the same text into 120 or 200 pages.

Counting words is better, but even word counts cannot compare a mathematical model with a taxonomic plate or microscopy atlas.

Have biology theses become longer?

In many settings, yes, but not simply because modern students write more.

Contemporary theses often carry obligations that earlier dissertations did not:

  • fuller literature reviews;
  • detailed statistical reporting;
  • ethics and consent documentation;
  • descriptions of software and databases;
  • declarations of authorship and contribution;
  • data-availability statements;
  • supplementary analyses;
  • multiple publishable studies.

At the same time, digital repositories allow raw data and code to live outside the thesis. The main document can therefore become more concise even while the complete scholarly record becomes enormous.

Modern biology has produced a curious inversion: the thesis may shrink while the research footprint expands.

What should a biology thesis actually contain?

The famous short theses should not be used as weapons against present-day students.

Telling a taxonomist that McClintock needed only 43 published pages is not helpful if the taxonomist must describe 70 species. Telling an ecologist that Watson finished in 92 pages does not remove the need to explain six field seasons. Telling a genomics student that Crick managed without a GitHub repository is unlikely to impress the examiner.

The right length is the length required to establish:

  1. what question was asked;
  2. why the question matters;
  3. how the evidence was obtained;
  4. what the evidence shows;
  5. where the interpretation remains uncertain;
  6. what contribution is genuinely original.

Anything essential should remain. Anything merely ceremonial deserves interrogation.

A thesis should not be short because necessary controls, failed experiments or awkward limitations have vanished. Nor should it be long because every preliminary analysis has been preserved like an insect in amber.

The biological thesis as an organism

Perhaps a biology thesis should be judged biologically.

It needs a skeleton: the central argument.

It needs organs: the chapters that perform distinct functions.

It needs circulation: connections allowing evidence to move between those chapters.

It may carry appendices, but these should behave more like useful symbionts than uncontrolled growths.

McClintock’s published thesis version was compact because chromosome observations could be organized into a concentrated argument. Watson’s 92 pages carried a bounded experimental study. Goodall’s work required more room because animal societies unfold through time and context. Crick’s dissertation became an image-rich object because structural biology speaks partly through patterns rather than paragraphs.

Their lengths differed because their evidence differed.

The real lesson of famous biological theses is therefore not that a dissertation should be short. It is that form should follow the biology.

A good thesis is not measured by how loudly it lands on the examiner’s desk. It is measured by whether its evidence can support the intellectual weight placed upon it. 🧬📚

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Substantive Uniformitarianism as a Testable Theory

One of Gould’s most important moves is to take an old geological slogan and return it to the status of a hypothesis. That may sound like a demotion, but in science it is also a form of respect. A hypothesis can be tested. It can be refined. It can be contradicted. It can do work, fail in part, survive in part, and teach the field what its own evidence will no longer permit. Gould calls substantive uniformitarianism a “testable theory of geologic change.” That phrase is the doorway into the whole problem.

Substantive uniformitarianism is the claim that Earth history has unfolded through a rough uniformity of rates or material conditions. In its Lyellian form, it emphasized “cumulative slow change” caused by natural processes operating at “relatively constant rates.” Gould is careful to distinguish this from methodological uniformitarianism, which is about invariant natural law. Substantive uniformitarianism is not a rule of scientific reasoning. It is a description of how the world supposedly behaved.

That difference is decisive. If substantive uniformitarianism is a theory about the tempo of Earth history, then it must answer to the Earth. It cannot hide behind the prestige of scientific method. It cannot claim immunity because it once helped geology escape supernatural explanation. It must be judged by strata, fossils, structures, rates, extinctions, origins, and the uneven archive of deep time.

Gould’s verdict is blunt: substantive uniformitarianism is “false.” But the meaning of “false” here requires care. Gould is not saying that ordinary processes are unimportant. He is not denying erosion, sedimentation, volcanism, glaciation, subsidence, uplift, or biological change. He is not trying to replace Lyell’s science with an appetite for spectacle. He is saying that strict uniformity of rate and condition has not “withstood the test of new data.” The problem is not the existence of slow change. The problem is the conversion of slow change into a universal expectation.

This is why the word “testable” matters. A testable theory may be valuable even when it eventually fails as a general doctrine. Lyell’s substantive uniformitarianism trained geologists to search for causes visible in the present. It asked whether small causes, given sufficient time, could explain immense results. That was a profound imaginative discipline. It prevented geologists from solving every difficulty by invoking a vast convulsion. It made patience scientific.

But patience can become a prejudice. If the field begins with the assumption that rates have remained essentially uniform, then evidence for pulses, crises, gaps, accelerations, and rare events may be treated as an embarrassment rather than a clue. Gould worries precisely about this. He says substantive uniformitarianism, held too rigidly, becomes “stifling to the formulation of new hypotheses.” A testable theory has slipped into a prior commitment. It no longer waits for the rocks to speak. It tells them which accent is acceptable.

The fossil record is one of Gould’s key pressure points. He writes that the history of life is “by no means uniform,” as seen in frequencies of extinction and origination plotted against time. Life does not appear as a smooth procession of steady replacement. It clusters, thins, expands, collapses, radiates, and suffers. Origination and extinction are not evenly metronomic. They produce patterns that make strict rate-uniformity implausible.

The same logic applies beyond paleontology. Sedimentary records can preserve long quiet intervals and sudden depositional events. Tectonic histories can include relatively stable configurations followed by reorganizations. Climate records can show gradual trends interrupted by rapid transitions. Volcanic activity can pulse. Erosion can be slow for long periods and intense under unusual hydrological or climatic conditions. A lawful Earth can still have an irregular pulse.

This is where Gould’s distinction protects science from a false dilemma. If one rejects substantive uniformitarianism, one is not rejecting natural explanation. One is rejecting a specific claim about uniform rates or conditions. Methodological uniformitarianism remains intact. The same laws can operate through very different circumstances. Gravity does not change because a landslide is sudden. Thermodynamics does not vanish because climate shifts abruptly. Biological principles do not fail because extinction rates spike. Lawful processes need not produce evenly paced history.

A modern reader can see Gould’s argument as an early doorway into a richer view of Earth systems. Complex systems often behave unevenly. Thresholds can be crossed. Feedbacks can amplify change. Stress can accumulate before release. Biological systems can absorb disturbance until they cannot. Sediment can build grain by grain, then move in a storm. A quiet slope can hold for centuries, then collapse in minutes. None of this requires abandoning law. It requires abandoning the expectation that lawfulness wears a calm face.

The limitation worth considering is whether Gould’s rejection of substantive uniformitarianism risks flattening its more moderate forms. Few modern geologists would defend strict constant rates. Many would instead affirm that known processes, including ordinary ones, remain central to explanation unless evidence demands otherwise. That more flexible view is not the rigid doctrine Gould criticizes. It is closer to a research preference: begin with processes we understand, but do not force every past event into the mold of present averages.

Yet Gould anticipates that distinction. His quarrel is not with using known causes. It is with treating rate-uniformity as a governing doctrine. He wants hypotheses judged “on their own merit,” not by whether they conform to “a preconceived idea of nature’s course.” That line captures the scientific ethic behind the article. A theory earns its authority from evidence, and loses authority when evidence no longer supports it.

This post should therefore leave readers with a more generous understanding of scientific failure. Substantive uniformitarianism was not useless because it was false in strict form. It was historically productive. It disciplined geology, expanded time, and elevated natural process. But once the evidence demanded a more varied Earth history, the theory had to shrink from doctrine back into context.

In that sense, Gould does not merely reject a concept. He restores the dignity of testability. Theories are not sacred because they helped us once. They remain scientific because they remain answerable. Substantive uniformitarianism helped geologists learn how to read the planet. Then the planet, with its uneven record of life, climate, rock, rupture, and recovery, read back.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Tiny Theses That Cast Enormous Shadows

A doctoral thesis is often imagined as an academic cathedral: hundreds of pages, footnotes stacked like masonry, several years of work sealed inside a hardbound volume heavy enough to discourage casual reading.

Yet some of the most influential doctoral theses in history were surprisingly compact. John Nash transformed economics in 27 pages. Albert Einstein earned his doctorate with a study of molecular dimensions occupying roughly two dozen pages. Ludwig Wittgenstein submitted a slim philosophical book that had already been published. In biology, James Watson completed a thesis of about 92 pages on bacteriophages.

These works offer a refreshing lesson: a thesis is not valuable because of how much paper it occupies. Its real measure is whether it asks an important question, makes an original contribution, and supports its conclusions with sufficient evidence.

What counts as a “short” thesis?

Page counts must be treated carefully. Historical theses survive as handwritten manuscripts, typescripts, journal reprints, library scans and later book editions. One version may include a title page, curriculum vitae and examination records, while another contains only the scientific text.

Different disciplines also require different kinds of evidence. A mathematical proof may be complete in 20 pages. A modern experimental biology thesis may need extensive descriptions of samples, controls, ethics, statistical analyses, protocols and supplementary data. A humanities thesis may devote hundreds of pages to contextual interpretation.

“Short,” therefore, does not mean the same thing everywhere. The examples below range from genuinely miniature dissertations to works that were merely concise by the standards of their fields.

ScholarFieldThesisApproximate extent
John NashMathematics and economicsNon-Cooperative Games27 pages
Albert EinsteinPhysicsA New Determination of Molecular DimensionsRoughly 24 pages
James D. WatsonBiologyThe Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated BacteriophageAbout 92 pages
Marie CuriePhysics and chemistryResearch on Radioactive Substances144 pages in a surviving scan
Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophyTractatus Logico-PhilosophicusEdition-dependent, but a slim book
Kenneth ArrowEconomicsSocial Choice and Individual ValuesCompact monograph-length work
Louis de BrogliePhysicsResearches on the Theory of QuantaA relatively concise dissertation

John Nash: 27 pages that changed economics

Perhaps the clearest example of an extraordinarily short and influential PhD thesis is John Forbes Nash Jr.’s Non-Cooperative Games.

Nash received his PhD in mathematics from Princeton University in 1950. Princeton describes his dissertation as only 27 pages long. He completed his doctoral work in two years and received the degree shortly before his twenty-second birthday.

The thesis addressed situations in which several decision-makers act independently, each attempting to improve their own outcome. Nash introduced a general way of describing a stable configuration in such a game. At this point, no player can improve their result by changing strategy alone while the others retain theirs.

This configuration became known as the Nash equilibrium.

The idea eventually escaped the borders of mathematics. It became central to economics and was applied to bargaining, auctions, competition between firms, international relations, evolutionary biology, voting, public policy and many other settings. Nash shared the 1994 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his analysis of equilibria in non-cooperative games.

The remarkable feature of Nash’s thesis is not simply its brevity. It is its intellectual compression. The thesis defines a problem, develops the mathematical framework, establishes the existence of equilibrium under broad conditions and explains why the concept matters.

There is very little academic furniture. Almost everything in the room is load-bearing.

Albert Einstein: a doctorate without relativity

Einstein’s doctoral thesis is often surrounded by a cloud of misunderstanding. It was not his thesis on special relativity. Nor was it principally about the photoelectric effect or the famous relation between mass and energy.

Its title was Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen, or A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions. Einstein submitted it to the University of Zurich in 1905, and the doctorate was formally conferred in 1906. The University of Zurich describes it as one of Einstein’s most frequently cited research papers.

The original dissertation is commonly counted as roughly 24 pages, depending on whether preliminary material is included. Rather than rewriting the foundations of space and time, Einstein used properties of solutions, particularly viscosity and diffusion, to estimate molecular dimensions and Avogadro’s number.

This was a practical and testable problem. Molecules could not yet be directly observed, and some prominent scientists remained cautious about whether atoms and molecules represented physical objects or merely convenient theoretical devices. Einstein showed how measurable macroscopic behaviour could reveal microscopic dimensions.

His thesis illustrates a powerful form of scientific economy. A narrow question can become profound when it connects quantities that can be measured with entities that cannot yet be seen.

Einstein’s dissertation also offers a useful antidote to academic grandiosity. A thesis does not need to announce a complete theory of the universe. It can earn its place by solving one carefully chosen problem unusually well.

Louis de Broglie: matter begins to behave like a wave

Another compact physics dissertation altered the foundations of twentieth-century science.

In 1924, Louis de Broglie submitted Recherches sur la théorie des quanta, or Researches on the Theory of Quanta, to the Faculty of Sciences at the University of Paris. The thesis proposed that material particles, including electrons, should be associated with waves.

At the time, physicists had already learned that light could exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties. De Broglie asked a beautifully symmetrical question: if waves such as light can behave like particles, might particles such as electrons also behave like waves?

The answer became the idea of matter waves. Electron diffraction experiments later supported it, and the concept became foundational to wave mechanics and quantum theory. De Broglie received the 1929 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering the wave nature of electrons.

De Broglie’s thesis demonstrates a different kind of brevity. Its power came from a bold conceptual reversal. Instead of accumulating an enormous catalogue of observations, it extended an existing symmetry to territory where few had thought to apply it.

A small intellectual hinge swung open an enormous door.

James Watson: a short biology thesis before the double helix

Biological theses are rarely as short as mathematical ones because experiments bring logistical luggage. Organisms must be cultivated, samples prepared, treatments administered, controls established and observations recorded.

Nevertheless, James D. Watson’s 1950 doctoral dissertation at Indiana University was only about 92 pages. Its title was The Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated Bacteriophage. Indiana University preserves a digitized copy in its collections.

A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria. Watson investigated how exposure to X-rays affected the biological activity of these viruses. The thesis belonged to the growing research programme using bacteriophages as relatively simple systems for studying heredity, mutation and biological reproduction.

This work preceded Watson’s involvement in determining the structure of DNA. It was not a hidden preview of the double helix. Instead, it shows him developing within the experimental culture of phage genetics that helped prepare the ground for molecular biology. Watson defended the dissertation in May 1950.

At 92 pages, the thesis is not a pamphlet. Yet it remains strikingly compact when compared with many present-day experimental dissertations containing several published papers, long methodological appendices and extensive supplementary datasets.

Its brevity was possible partly because the research question was sharply bounded. It did not attempt to explain all viral biology. It asked what happened to particular biological properties after a specific physical treatment.

Marie Curie: concise evidence for a new world of matter

Marie Curie’s doctoral thesis was longer than Nash’s or Einstein’s, but it was still a remarkably concentrated document given the scale of the discoveries it assembled.

Curie defended her thesis on radioactive substances at the Sorbonne on 25 June 1903. Her work brought together painstaking measurements of radioactivity and investigations that led to the identification of polonium and radium. A surviving digitized version runs to approximately 144 pages, while later published editions may have different pagination.

Curie’s research helped establish that radioactivity was associated with the atom itself rather than being a conventional chemical reaction caused by molecular arrangements. Her doctoral work stood at the crossroads of physics and chemistry, examining both the measurable emissions from matter and the isolation of previously unknown elements.

She shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics with Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel, and later received the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Curie’s thesis reveals why page count should not be confused with effort. Behind a concise finished text may lie years of physically exhausting experimentation, repeated chemical separations, instrument building and measurements conducted under difficult conditions.

The document was compact. The labour compressed inside it was immense.

Ludwig Wittgenstein: when a philosophical book became a thesis

The humanities provide one of the strangest examples.

Ludwig Wittgenstein completed the work that became Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus during and shortly after the First World War. It was published in German in 1921 and in a bilingual edition in 1922.

When Wittgenstein returned to Cambridge in 1929, he submitted the already published Tractatus as his doctoral dissertation. Trinity College records that he received the PhD in June of that year.

The Tractatus is a slim and highly compressed work organized as a hierarchy of numbered propositions. It examines the relationship among language, logic, facts and the world. Its central ambition is to clarify what can meaningfully be expressed and where language reaches its limits.

Its exact page count depends heavily on the edition, translation, typography and inclusion of parallel German and English texts. It is therefore more accurate to call it a compact book than to assign it a universal thesis length.

Wittgenstein’s case was also highly unusual. This was not a normal student dissertation gradually revised through conventional doctoral supervision. It was an already famous philosophical work submitted by a thinker whose reputation had preceded his formal degree.

Still, it demonstrates that philosophical significance need not be proportional to textual acreage. The Tractatus is short because it is aphoristic, architectonic and exceptionally dense. A few lines can occupy commentators for entire careers.

That does not necessarily make it an ideal model for ordinary thesis writing. Compression can generate power, but it can also generate obscurity. Wittgenstein’s brevity produced both illumination and a century of argument about what exactly he meant.

Kenneth Arrow: a compact thesis and the limits of collective choice

Kenneth Arrow’s doctoral research produced another small work with a gigantic intellectual afterlife.

Arrow’s dissertation, Social Choice and Individual Values, was completed at Columbia University and published in 1951. The work grew from research he conducted at RAND and laid the foundation for modern social choice theory.

Arrow asked whether individual preferences could be combined into a coherent collective decision while satisfying several apparently reasonable principles. His result, now known as Arrow’s impossibility theorem, showed that no voting rule can satisfy all of the desired conditions in every possible situation involving multiple alternatives.

The theorem did not say that democracy is pointless or that all voting systems are equally bad. It showed that collective choice contains unavoidable trade-offs. A system may protect one desirable principle only by weakening another.

Arrow’s dissertation later became a compact monograph rather than a sprawling encyclopaedia. Its exact pagination depends on whether one counts the original dissertation, RAND report or published edition, so it is safer to describe it as concise rather than attach a single number to it.

The work influenced economics, political science, philosophy, computer science and the mathematical study of voting. Arrow received the 1972 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for broader contributions to economic equilibrium and welfare theory, with his social-choice work remaining one of his defining achievements.

Like Nash, Arrow showed how a precisely formulated mathematical question could expose the hidden structure of everyday social institutions.

A famous case that was not a PhD thesis

Lists of short doctoral dissertations frequently include Claude Shannon’s A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits. That work showed how Boolean algebra could be used to analyse and design electrical switching circuits, helping create the conceptual foundations of digital computing.

It was unquestionably influential. It was also a master’s thesis, not a PhD thesis. MIT records the work in its repository, and MIT publications consistently identify it as Shannon’s master’s thesis.

This correction matters because stories about tiny famous theses often grow through repetition. Einstein’s dissertation becomes “his thesis on relativity.” Shannon’s master’s thesis becomes a doctorate. Page counts are copied without checking whether they include references or front matter.

The mythology of short theses can become longer than the theses themselves.

What these theses have in common

Their subjects differ dramatically, but several patterns recur.

1. Each thesis has a sharply defined centre

Nash studied equilibrium in non-cooperative games. Einstein estimated molecular dimensions. Watson examined X-ray-inactivated bacteriophages. Arrow studied how individual preferences become collective decisions.

None tried to “solve mathematics,” “explain physics” or “reconstruct society.” Their ambition was channelled through a narrow question.

A good thesis often begins by making the problem smaller and the thinking deeper.

2. Their originality can be stated clearly

The core contribution of each work can be expressed in a few sentences. This does not mean the work was simple. It means the author knew where the intellectual pulse was located.

A thesis becomes bloated when its central contribution is buried beneath everything the researcher learned along the way. Scholarship requires context, but context should orbit the result rather than eclipse it.

3. They contain enough evidence for their claims

Brevity is valuable only when nothing essential has been removed.

Nash still needed definitions and proofs. Einstein needed derivations tied to measurable quantities. Watson needed experimental observations. Curie needed systematic measurements and chemical evidence.

A thesis should not be short because methods, controls, limitations or contradictory results have been hidden in a drawer.

4. They often opened questions rather than closing fields

Nash equilibrium did not finish game theory. De Broglie did not complete quantum mechanics. Arrow did not design the perfect voting system. Their theses created intellectual machinery that others could use, challenge and extend.

A strong dissertation does not need to contain the final word. It needs to add a reliable new sentence to the conversation.

Should today’s PhD students try to write a 27-page thesis?

Usually not.

Modern universities often have formal requirements concerning introductions, literature reviews, methods, ethics, authorship, data availability, limitations and references. Experimental and computational projects may generate several interconnected studies. Interdisciplinary work may require enough explanation for readers from more than one field.

A student should therefore not use Nash’s 27 pages as a machete and begin hacking away at necessary detail.

The better lesson is not “write fewer pages.” It is:

Make every page know why it is there.

A concise thesis may still be 150 pages. A long thesis may still be elegant if every chapter supports the central argument. Conversely, a 40-page thesis can feel endless when its question is vague and its reasoning repetitive.

The true enemy is not length. It is intellectual fog.

The real unit of a thesis is not the page

Famous short theses are alluring because they appear to promise escape from academic bulk. But their deeper message is more demanding.

Writing briefly requires confidence about the question, command of the evidence and discipline about what belongs. It is often easier to add another chapter than to decide which single argument the thesis must defend.

Nash needed 27 pages to alter economics. Einstein needed roughly two dozen to make molecules measurable. Wittgenstein turned a slim sequence of propositions into one of philosophy’s most debated books. Curie placed evidence for a new atomic reality into a comparatively compact volume.

Their theses were small containers carrying unusually dense cargo.

The goal of doctoral research is not to produce the longest object that a shelf can endure. It is to make an original contribution that remains standing after the scaffolding is removed. 📚✨