Science, society, and the search for truth: An interview with Chrysostomos Mantzavinos#
In this interview, Professor Chrysostomos Mantzavinos MAE explores the idea of science as a self-governing enterprise and reflects on the institutional culture that underpins its success.
About Chrysostomos Mantzavinos#
Chrysostomos Mantzavinos is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Athens, known for his interdisciplinary work at the intersection of philosophy, economics, and the social sciences. He holds two PhDs (in Economics and Philosophy) from the University of Tübingen
, and has held academic appointments at institutions including Freiburg
, Stanford
, and the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods
.
His research focuses on how knowledge is produced, structured, and understood within scientific and social systems. He is the author of several influential books, including Individuals, Institutions, and Markets, Naturalistic Hermeneutics
and Explanatory Pluralism
. His most recent work, The Constitution of Science
(Cambridge University Press, 2024), explores the idea that science operates like a polity governed by an unwritten constitution – an institutional framework that underpins the scientific enterprise.
Professor Mantzavinos was elected to the Philosophy, Theology and Religious Studies section of Academia Europaea in 2022, to the European Academy of Sciences in 2024 and became a member of the Académie Internationale de Philosophie des Sciences in 2023.
Read the interview#
Can you explain, in simple terms, what you mean when you describe science as having a “constitution”?
There are two broad types of institutions depending on who enforces the rules. Those institutions that have emerged spontaneously in a process of social interaction that no one can consciously control are the informal institutions. Those institutions that are the product of collective political decisions and are enforced by the state are the formal institutions, i.e. the legal rules. In the specific domain of science, consequently, the informal institutions of science are made up of all normative rules that scientists follow in their daily scientific lives, mainly the scientific techniques they employ and the moral rules that they respect; the formal rules are the legal rules which differ between countries. The most important informal and formal institutions of science make up what I call the “Constitution of Science”, which defines the way the scientific game is played: other rules, other game.”
Could you share a real-world example that shows how the constitution of science works in practice?
Lysenko’s ideas were endorsed by the communist party and became official Soviet policy, indeed official Soviet science, whereas prominent scientists supporting orthodox genetics were denunciated, prosecuted and imprisoned. The meeting of the Lenin Academy of Agricultural Sciences in 1948 resulted in the adoption of Michurnism, an account of epigenetic inheritance commonly known as Lysenkoism, as the “only correct theory” to be taught in the USSR. Lysenko at the end of his report on problems with Mendelian genetics stated that “the Central Committee of the Party has examined my report and approved it.”
What inspired you to write The Constitution of Science? Was there a particular moment or experience that sparked the idea for the book?
Ever since the Scientific Revolution science has progressed despite the existence of very different political movements such as totalitarianism, fundamentalism, colonialism and political regimes such as kingdoms, empires, dictatorships and democracies. Why? Because of the prevalence of the informal institutions of science, the rules that scientists have been following in their daily work independently of the political regime that they happened to be born in and live in. It is these informal institutions that comprise the constitutional culture of science that have led to the unique success of this distinctive human endeavour that we call “science”.
Why do you think it’s important for society to better understand how science works as a system, not just the discoveries it produces?
The scientific discourse is a very specific kind of discourse, exactly because of its tight institutional structure. It is a serious misunderstanding of the actual scientific practice to conceptualise the situation as if a scientist alone judges the evidential merit of a hypothesis and decides to accept it or reject it. The decision is his or her decision, but not a scientific decision. It becomes a scientific one, only when it has passed through the tight institutional context of the scientific enterprise – only then warrant is certified and objective knowledge is established. A single scientist cannot be objective, only the rules of the scientific process and its outcomes are objective. To the question asked by the public: “Why is science special and why should it be protected by an organised polity?”, the answer is: because our fellow citizens who are doing science are guided by the scientific method encapsulated in the informal rules of science, the only rules so far that we can trust to lead us to a true account of reality. The scientific community establishes the intersubjective validity of its products in virtue of following an objective procedure. No procedure can be absolutely objective – a view from nowhere does not exist. No procedure can include all participants – a view from everywhere does not exist either. The objective view of science is the view of no-one in particular.”
What role do you think philosophy can play in helping science move forward in a positive way?
Philosophy can highlight this value pluralism and clarify that a trade-off between values becomes mandatory. Who should make the trade-offs and at what level? My own philosophical approach stresses that this is a problem that can be and is de facto addressed in the form of a constitutional issue: what are the highest institutional principles in an organised polity that should regulate the functioning of science, so that all the values that we deem important are appropriately reflected and sufficiently traded off?
I work out five general principles that should be adopted, if science is valued positively and should be protected: 1. Guaranteeing freedom of expression, 2. Mutual rational control by critical discussion, 3. Appropriate steering of scientific competition, 4. Open access to the scientific community and 5. Appropriately fitting formal and informal institutions. Philosophy stresses that the range of the autonomy of science will ultimately depend on upholding the informal rules of science comprising its ethos and its methodology, and these rules must also be defended by the scientists themselves: an eternal vigilance on the part of the scientists is required, a vigilance that can ultimately secure that attempts at domination from the executive arm of government, religious authorities or organised economic interests will remain contestable.
Protecting science means protecting the informal institutions of science, the tacit Constitution of Science written in the heart of the scientists.”

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