An expansion of the Three Facets model that adds a crucial fourth dimension: the Academic-Structural-Organized Facet. This recognizes science as a concrete institutional apparatus—universities, departments, journals, tenure committees, grant agencies, conferences, and hierarchies. Where the Three Facets model captures science as method, as belief system, and as power structure, the Four Facets model adds the messy reality of science as a workplace and career path. This facet explains how academic politics shapes research priorities, how publication pressures incentivize certain kinds of science over others, and how institutional inertia can preserve outdated paradigms long after they should have been abandoned. The four facets together—Methodological-Logical, Religious-Ideological, Social-Political-Economic, and Academic-Structural-Organized—provide a complete framework for understanding science as a human activity.
Theory of the Four Facets of Science Example: "The replication crisis isn't just bad methodology—it's a Four Facets problem: methodological failures (Facet 1), ideological commitment to certain findings (Facet 2), economic pressure to publish positive results (Facet 3), and an academic structure that rewards quantity over quality (Facet 4)."
by Abzugal March 11, 2026
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