A couple of years ago, Gavin became frustrated with science journalism. No one was pulling together results
across fields; the articles usually didn’t link to the original source; they didn't use probabilities (or even
report the sample size); they were usually credulous about preliminary findings (“...which species was it tested
on?”); and they essentially never gave any sense of the magnitude or the baselines (“how much better is this
treatment than the previous best?”). Speculative results were covered with the same credence as solid proofs. And
highly technical fields like mathematics were rarely covered at all, regardless of their practical or intellectual
importance. So he had a go at doing it himself.
This year, in partnership with Renaissance Philanthropy, we took a more systematic approach. So, how did the world change this year? What happened in each science? Which results are speculative and which are solid? Which are the biggest, if true?
Our collection of 202 results is here. You can filter them by field, by our best guess of the probability that they generalise, and by their impact if they do. We also include bad news (in red).
Just three people but we cover a few fields. Gavin has a PhD in AI and has worked in epidemiology and metascience; Lauren was a physicist and is now a development economist; Ulkar was a wet-lab biologist and is now a science writer touching many areas. For other domains we had expert help from the Big If True fellows, but mistakes are our own.
Site designed and developed by Judah.
big | true. Every entry in the list is significant – scientifically, socially, or in delightfulness. But we wanted to weight them by impact. The “big if true” field is our guess at how much the entry would change the world if it generalised.
Our judgments of P(generalises), big | true, and Good/Bad are avowedly subjective. If we got something wrong please tell us at gavin@arbresearch.com.
By design, the selection of results is biased towards being comprehensible to laymen, being practically useful now or soon, and against even the good kind of speculation. Interestingness is correlated with importance - but clearly there will have been many important but superficially uninteresting things that didn't enter our search.
Renaissance Philanthropy supported Frontier of the Year 2025 to surface and contextualise this year's most notable advances in science and technology. Our mission is to fuel a 21st-century renaissance by increasing the ambition of philanthropists, scientists, and innovators. We design and operate time-bound, thesis-driven philanthropic funds that help move breakthrough ideas from discovery to real-world impact, particularly where traditional funding systems fall short. We believe identifying new frontiers is a critical step toward ensuring big-if-true ideas receive the attention and resources they deserve.
We thank Alex German, Tim McGee, Witold Więcek, Daniel Litt, Eirini Malliaraki, Markus Strasser, Anders Sandberg, Niccolò Zanichelli, Tom McCarthy, Ryan Marinelli, Lucia Asanache, Tomáš Gavenčiak, Misha Yagudin, Dron Hazra, Richard Fuisz, Ronit Kanwar, Arjun Pitchanathan, and Paul Crowe for comments.