The modern scientific enterprise faces an unprecedented structural crisis: the exponential growth of research output has overwhelmed the organizational capacity of traditional scientific infrastructure. This paper presents empirical evidence demonstrating that contemporary scientific structuring—comprising peer review, academic publishing, knowledge organization, and validation systems—is fundamentally incapable of accommodating current rates of information production. Through a systematic analysis of publication metrics, fraud detection records, reproducibility crisis indicators, and peer review sustainability data, we establish that scientific infrastructure has entered a state of structural saturation, in which the growth of information volume consistently exceeds the growth of organizational and evaluative capacity. Our findings indicate that fraudulent publications double approximately every 1.5 years, while legitimate scientific output doubles roughly every 15 years; that more than 70% of researchers report failures to reproduce published results; that peer review systems are able to adequately process fewer than 20% of submitted manuscripts; and that major academic publishers retract thousands of papers annually due to large-scale, systematic fraud. We demonstrate that this crisis is not episodic or anomalous, but systemic in nature. Linear organizational architectures are intrinsically incapable of managing exponential information flows without severe degradation of quality, reliability, and epistemic coherence. We argue that, absent radical architectural redesign, scientific knowledge production risks collapsing under its own informational weight—transitioning from a mechanism of truth discovery into a noise-generating system that undermines, rather than advances, human understanding. These results suggest that contemporary science stands at a critical inflection point, requiring fundamental restructuring of its epistemological infrastructure in order to remain viable in the information age.
Zen Revista (Thu,) studied this question.