
Gregor Johann Mendel
Augustinian friar, abbot, teacher, and scientist whose pea-plant experiments laid the foundation of genetics
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
73/100
Raw Score
60/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Strong
About
Mendel's public record is strongest where belief, worship discipline, patient work, and intellectual integrity overlap: he entered religious life, taught for years, carried out unusually careful experiments, and published results that later transformed science. The main limit on the profile is not scandal but observability: public evidence of direct aid to relatives, the poor, or other vulnerable groups is much thinner than evidence of scientific and monastic discipline.
The observable pattern is meaningfully positive. Mendel appears to have lived as a serious Christian cleric and scholar under material constraint, repeated illness, and professional disappointment without abandoning either worship or careful work. Because the public record is far richer on his experiments than on his day-to-day social care, the profile stays under review rather than moving to an unqualified top tier.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Mendel scores strongly on belief, worship discipline, integrity, and resilience because the public record shows a sustained religious vocation, painstakingly honest scientific work, and steadiness through poverty, illness, and delayed recognition. He does not score near the top overall because the evidence for repeated direct social care is much thinner than the evidence for disciplined scholarship and monastic commitment.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
His life as an Augustinian friar and later abbot is strong public evidence of theistic commitment.
His clerical vocation and serious religious formation support a strong but not fully documented score.
His scientific and religious work both assume an ordered reality rather than moral randomness.
As a practicing Catholic cleric, his public life was explicitly shaped by scripture and church teaching.
A Christian clerical life implies serious engagement with prophetic and saintly exemplars, though public detail is limited.
Contribution to Others
Public sources note family hardship and expectations, but they do not richly document later family provision.
Years of teaching and mentoring students support a modest positive score.
His monastic role points toward service, but specific public evidence of repeated material aid is thin.
There is some indirect support through teaching and priestly life, but little direct public documentation.
He repeatedly served as a teacher and accepted responsibilities inside the monastery community.
Outside the monastery tax dispute, there is little clear evidence of sustained liberation-focused public action.
Personal Discipline
His life as a long-term Augustinian friar and abbot supports a top score under the practicing Christian rule.
A monastic and clerical life supports disciplined charitable obligation, though public records are not detailed about amounts or beneficiaries.
Reliability
His record shows long consistency in teaching and experimentation, with no major evidence of deceit or opportunistic self-promotion.
Stability Under Pressure
He endured serious student poverty, tutored to survive, and kept pursuing study.
Depression, illness, and exam failures did not end his vocational or scientific commitments.
His long tax dispute with authorities and persistence after public neglect show meaningful steadiness under pressure.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Entered the Augustinian order at St. Thomas's Abbey
After financially difficult student years, Mendel chose monastic life in Brno and took the name Gregor instead of returning to the family farm.
→ This anchored his life in religious discipline and placed him in an intellectually supportive community.
highAbsorbed exam failure, illness, and continued training
Mendel failed the oral part of the teacher-certification exam, struggled with illness and nervous breakdowns, and still continued toward teaching and scientific study.
→ The episode shows vulnerability under pressure without collapse of long-term commitment.
mediumBegan the monastery hybridization program that led to the pea experiments
With Abbot Cyril Napp's backing, Mendel planned and then carried out years of controlled hybridization work on peas, eventually testing about 28,000 plants.
→ The work displayed patience, precision, and disciplined use of evidence over many years.
highPresented and published the experiments on plant hybrids
Mendel presented his findings to the Natural Science Society in Brno in 1865 and published the paper in 1866, even though it drew little attention at the time.
→ He completed the work honestly and put it into public record without inflating its reception.
globalBecame abbot and resisted a state tax he believed unconstitutional
After election as abbot, administrative burdens sharply reduced his research time. He then entered a long dispute with authorities by refusing to let the monastery pay a new tax for a religious fund.
→ The episode suggests principled stubbornness and endurance under institutional pressure rather than opportunistic compliance.
highHis work was rediscovered and acknowledged after his death
Hugo de Vries, Carl Correns, and Erich von Tschermak independently reached similar results and brought renewed attention to Mendel's earlier paper.
→ The posthumous recognition strengthened the evidence that his research had been both original and foundational.
globalPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Student poverty and family financial strain
1840His family could not adequately support long years of schooling, so he tutored and endured recurring hardship.
Response: He persisted in study and found a religious path that also stabilized his material life.
positiveTeacher-certification failures and illness
1850Exam failure and nervous collapse interrupted his professional path more than once.
Response: He resumed study, returned to teaching, and later completed the work that made him historically important.
positiveAbbot-era tax dispute
1874State authorities pressed the monastery over a tax for a religious fund that Mendel considered unconstitutional.
Response: He continued resisting and accepted long administrative conflict instead of quietly complying.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Illness, professional disappointment, and later legal conflict tested whether his steadiness was real.
stablecurrent stage
His standing now rests on a posthumously vindicated scientific legacy paired with a credible, if unevenly documented, Christian life of discipline.
upearly years
Hardship, study, and religious entry formed a life structured around discipline rather than comfort.
upgrowth years
Teaching, scientific training in Vienna, and years of controlled experiments sharpened both his method and his reliability.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Kept a coherent line between religious vocation, teaching, and scientific inquiry.
- • Worked with unusual patience, record-keeping discipline, and caution about claims.
- • Absorbed poverty, depression, exam failures, and delayed recognition without abandoning responsibility.
Concerns
- • Direct evidence of concrete service to poor or marginalized people is much thinner than evidence of scholarship.
- • Much of the moral reading is filtered through later scientific legacy rather than richly documented daily conduct.
Evidence Quality
5
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.