
Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov
Soviet plant geneticist, botanist, agronomist, and scientific organizer
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
58/100
Raw Score
47/85
Confidence
76%
Evidence
Strong
About
Vavilov spent his career trying to protect humanity from famine through crop diversity, disease resistance, and seed conservation. The strongest public pattern is durable service through science and institution-building, while the clearest caution is that the record tells us little about his private worship life or explicit revealed-faith commitments.
Observable behavior leans clearly constructive: he built public collections, listened to farmers, trained researchers, and kept defending genetics after it became dangerous to do so. His score stays below exemplary mainly because belief and worship evidence are thin, not because public evidence shows cruelty or bad-faith opportunism.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Vavilov scores best on social care, integrity, and resilience because the public record shows decades of work to reduce hunger, build shared scientific infrastructure, and hold to his methods under intense political pressure. The profile stays below a top-tier rating mainly because public evidence for private faith and worship is thin, not because the visible record shows major moral collapse.
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
No strong public evidence establishes explicit theistic commitment.
His life and language reflect moral accountability, but not in clearly religious terms.
He treated life and agriculture as governed by discoverable moral and natural order.
The accessible record does not show a scripturally guided public life.
Little public evidence ties his moral language to prophetic models.
Contribution to Others
Public sources focus on scientific and civic work rather than family-specific provision.
He trained younger scientists and built institutions that supported future generations.
His clearest mission was reducing hunger and crop failure through science.
His work aimed at broadly shared public benefit beyond kin and nation.
He repeatedly listened to farmers and field conditions in shaping his work.
His defense of genetics under repression supported scientific freedom, even if indirectly.
Personal Discipline
No reliable public evidence supports a judgment about routine prayer.
His life shows public-oriented material service, but not clearly religiously disciplined giving.
Reliability
The record shows unusually strong commitment to his scientific and public mission under pressure.
Stability Under Pressure
He worked through scarcity conditions and endured prison deprivation without visible moral collapse.
His record shows endurance through denunciation, arrest, and imprisonment.
He remained tied to his core methods even when politics turned hostile and dangerous.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Led an early collecting expedition in Iran and the Pamir
During World War I, Vavilov organized fieldwork in Iran and the Pamir region and returned with crop material that deepened his commitment to disease resistance, diversity, and food resilience.
→ Laid the field foundation for his later food-security and plant-diversity work.
highBuilt a national institute around crop diversity and breeding
With state backing, Vavilov reorganized the plant bureau into the institute that became VIR and turned crop diversity into a large public research and conservation system.
→ Converted scientific ideals into durable public infrastructure.
highExpanded centers-of-origin research and a world-class seed collection
Drawing on worldwide expeditions and comparative plant study, Vavilov argued that crops have geographic centers of diversity and origin while his institute amassed more than 250,000 samples for breeding and conservation.
→ Gave plant breeding and conservation a durable geographic and genetic framework.
highStayed with genetics as Lysenko turned disagreement into danger
As Trofim Lysenko gained Stalin's backing, Vavilov was denounced as a Mendelian geneticist and lost political protection because he would not replace evidence-based genetics with ideological pseudoscience.
→ Marked the collapse of his public standing and the start of severe personal risk.
highArrested during a collecting trip in Ukraine
Security agents arrested Vavilov during field work amid the anti-genetics campaign, accusing him of espionage and sabotage.
→ Removed him from public scientific life and left his colleagues exposed.
highDied in Saratov prison after years of repression
His death sentence had been commuted, but imprisonment, malnutrition, and harsh conditions ended his life in Saratov prison.
→ Turned him into a symbol of scientific integrity crushed by political coercion.
highPosthumously rehabilitated by the Soviet Supreme Court
After Stalin's death, Vavilov's case was reopened and the Soviet Supreme Court posthumously rehabilitated him, helping restore his scientific reputation.
→ His name and work reentered public scientific life, though too late for him personally.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Lysenko rise and public attacks on genetics
1936Evidence-based genetics became politically dangerous as Lysenko gained Stalin's backing.
Response: Vavilov did not publicly replace genetics with ideological claims merely to protect his rank.
positiveArrest during field work
1940Security agents arrested him during a collecting trip in Ukraine on espionage and sabotage accusations.
Response: The public record shows endurance rather than capitulation after his removal from public life.
positiveImprisonment, malnutrition, and death in Saratov
1943He endured prison deprivation after a commuted death sentence and died in custody.
Response: Later accounts present him as a scientist who was broken physically without being converted intellectually to Lysenkoism.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Political repression transformed a scientific disagreement into personal destruction.
downcurrent stage
His living stage is over, but his legacy remains broadly constructive because later science kept vindicating his public mission.
stableearly years
Training in plant pathology and genetics linked science to hunger prevention early in his career.
upgrowth years
He turned crop diversity into public infrastructure through institutes, expeditions, and shared collections.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly treated crop diversity as a public good tied to human survival.
- • Listened to farmers and field conditions instead of limiting his work to the laboratory.
- • Stayed publicly aligned with genetics even after that stance became dangerous.
Concerns
- • Accessible public evidence about private worship and explicit revealed-faith commitments is very thin.
- • Most of the social-care case is mediated through institutions and long-term food-security effects rather than direct personal charity.
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.