English

Polydoxon Transformations and Scientific Reward in Physics

History and Philosophy of Physics 2026-05-18 v2 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

We develop a descriptive account of scientific reward in physics based on the concept of the time-dependent Polydoxon, defined as the structured set of empirically viable theories at a given time. We argue that highly rewarded contributions, such as those recognized by major prizes and professional honors, can be systematically understood as those that transform this space. These transformations take the form of expansion (adding viable theories), contraction (eliminating viable theories), reconfiguration (illuminating deeper structures and relations within and between theories), and enabling moves (methodological or technological advances that enable future transformations). The analysis is further refined by emphasizing that reward correlates with the transformation's magnitude, assessed along dimensions of scope, centrality, depth, and future leverage. This framework reframes the analysis of rewarded achievement away from isolated theoretical successes and toward the dynamics of a landscape of viable theories, providing a more unified descriptive interpretation of rewarded scientific activity in physics across its diverse set of theoretical and experimental discoveries.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.08642,
  title  = {Polydoxon Transformations and Scientific Reward in Physics},
  author = {James D. Wells},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.08642},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

42 pages, minor corrections

R2 v1 2026-07-01T12:59:26.663Z