
Rosalind Elsie Franklin
Chemist and X-ray crystallographer
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
59/100
Raw Score
49/85
Confidence
78%
Evidence
Medium-high
About
Rosalind Franklin was a British Jewish chemist and X-ray crystallographer whose DNA, coal, and virus research helped shape modern molecular biology.
Observable record shows rigorous scientific contribution, wartime service, refugee-committee service, collaboration with students and colleagues, and notable perseverance through cancer. Private belief and worship evidence is limited, so those dimensions are scored cautiously rather than negatively.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
High confidence in scientific contribution, integrity, and resilience; moderate confidence in social-care evidence; low confidence for private devotional practice.
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
Publicly identified with a Jewish background and continuing traditions, but detailed personal theology is limited.
No strong direct public evidence on eschatological accountability; scored cautiously.
Some religious-family context but limited direct evidence of spiritual framing.
Jewish identity and tradition are evidenced; personal scripture-guided practice is not strongly documented.
No direct evidence of prophetic modeling beyond inherited Jewish tradition.
Contribution to Others
Family ties are visible, but direct care evidence is limited.
Mentored and collaborated with students and junior researchers, including Gosling, Holmes, and Finch.
Family and personal refugee-committee service supports concern for vulnerable people, though details are limited.
Worked with the German-Jewish Refugee Committee during university vacations according to Jewish Women's Archive.
Direct-request helping is not well documented publicly.
Scientific and wartime work helped remove practical constraints, but direct liberation work is limited to refugee-service evidence.
Personal Discipline
No strong public evidence of regular prayer or worship practice.
Community-service tradition is evidenced; disciplined religious giving is not directly documented.
Reliability
Record shows careful, evidence-first scientific conduct and sustained commitments across institutions.
Stability Under Pressure
Financial hardship evidence is thin, but she navigated wartime and research-funding constraints.
Continued high-level research after ovarian cancer diagnosis.
Worked through wartime service, tense scientific competition, and under-recognition without public retaliation.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Worked on coal research for the war effort
After Cambridge, Franklin gave up a fellowship path to work at the British Coal Utilisation Research Association, applying physical chemistry to coal and carbon during World War II.
→ Produced doctoral work and practical coal/carbon findings valuable to industry.
mediumDeveloped X-ray diffraction expertise in Paris
Franklin worked with Jacques Mering in Paris, deepening X-ray diffraction methods that later made her DNA and virus research possible.
→ Built technical mastery and published carbon-structure research.
mediumJoined King's College London DNA project
Franklin joined King's College London and applied X-ray diffraction to DNA, distinguishing forms and measuring density and structural features.
→ Established data needed to understand DNA conformation.
highProduced Photograph 51 evidence
Franklin and Raymond Gosling produced the clear B-form DNA diffraction image known as Photograph 51 after a 62-hour X-ray exposure.
→ The image and associated data became crucial evidence for the DNA double helix model.
globalDNA papers published with under-recognized contribution
Franklin and Gosling's Nature paper appeared alongside Watson and Crick's model; later accounts note her work was central but not properly acknowledged until later.
→ Her contribution became a major case study in scientific credit and gendered under-recognition.
highShifted to Birkbeck virus research
After leaving King's, Franklin led important plant-virus structural work at Birkbeck with Aaron Klug, Kenneth Holmes, and John Finch.
→ Helped lay foundations for structural virology, including tobacco mosaic virus work.
highContinued work after ovarian cancer diagnosis
After suspected and confirmed ovarian cancer, Franklin continued research, travel, collaboration, and publication preparation during treatment.
→ Her group prepared numerous papers in 1956-1957 and planned further virus research.
highDied before full recognition and Nobel era
Franklin died in London at age 37; later recognition emphasized her essential DNA and virus contributions.
→ Her legacy became a reference point for scientific rigor, credit, and perseverance.
globalPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
World War II career redirection
1942Gave up a Cambridge fellowship path to work on coal research for the British war effort.
Response: Accepted practical service work and turned it into doctoral research.
positiveKing's College DNA conflict and under-recognition
1953Her DNA data were used in a competitive environment and her central role was not fully acknowledged at the time.
Response: Completed and published supporting scientific work and moved into virus research rather than abandoning the field.
positiveOvarian cancer diagnosis
1956Diagnosed with ovarian cancer while leading productive virus research.
Response: Continued research, collaboration, travel, and publication planning until shortly before death.
strong_positiveProgression
crisis years
Broadened scientific contribution while enduring severe personal hardship.
stableearly years
Service-oriented technical work and doctoral formation.
improvinggrowth years
High-impact evidence generation amid institutional conflict.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Exacting evidence standards across multiple research domains.
- • Continued collaboration and publication after professional disappointment.
Concerns
- • Belief and worship scores are limited by observability, not by evidence of rejection.
Evidence Quality
5
Strong
2
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium-high
This profile evaluates observable public evidence only; it does not judge hidden intention, private spirituality, salvation, or personal worth.