Posted on 10/14/2003 7:48:32 PM PDT by FairOpinion
Bills to pay and profits to be made. Which is not a bad thing if publishers of scientific journals made their money from individuals who paid out of pocket. But they don't. Their major source of income is from institutional subscribers and per page charges for authors. When you follow that profit trail, it leads to our government. The government and the taxpayers have an interest in making the content available to the public and not seeing our dollars end up in the pockets of Dutch or British publishers.
Seriously, a strong distinction has to be made between social science research, and humanistic research. I'm in the latter, and yeah, there is an "anything goes" attitude in those fields; peer review usually consists just of people looking over it, and then asking for more references to buttress such-and-such claim. But social sciences are entirely different; people there are very serious about establishing causal connections between objects and relationships. I'm taking a course in quantitative research methods at the moment, and the instructor was a physicist by training before he got into communication studies. He brings a hard-science attitude in his approach to social studies, and frequently criticizes the approaches of us rhetoricians for being "soft". You may also be delightful to know that in one class, he took an improptu swipe at Paul Feyrabend.
They're taking the body cast off next week.
I'm doing a presentation in the class tomorrow on how grid networks are affecting scientific communication. Pace, the speed at which results are produced and disseminated, is going to be the main theme.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.