[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Thatcher vs. Harnad
I have been following the recent (ongoing?) debate between Sandy
Thatcher and Stevan Harnad, but it does seem to me that the world
has already moved beyond the terms of the argument. Thatcher
gets it mostly right and Harnad mostly wrong, but there are
enough other people determined to get it wrong as well, thus
boosting the Harnadian platform by acclamation. As I have
remarked before on this list (though I misspelled it), open
access is a fait accompli. Arguments in favor of it, however
false, misleading, or intellectually dishonest, carry the day
with the proven strategy of saying the same thing over and over
in a louder and louder voice.
Please test the hypothesis: take any highly-cited article six
months after formal publication; Google for it using author's
name and article title; and see if you can find it somewhere on
the Web without access restrictions. You may not find the
article if you simply use keywords, as many OA articles are
poorly designed for search-engine optimization.
The kids have had a great time tearing down the playhouse. The
responsibility of those who care about scholarly communications
is to pick up the pieces and forge something new. OA may be a
huge policy error, but it has happened, and we would compound the
error if we did not attempt to clean our nest now that it has
been fouled.
Joe Esposito