[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Flashback to 1971: formalizing informal communication channels
Joe Toth wrote:
"has the presence of both sanctioned/published and
unsanctioned/pre-pub materials in an IR really begun to
dismantle science's walls of rigor?"
Phil responds:
Has anyone died of theoretical/high-energy physics, or of
Topology or Bayesian economics? While I take your point about
looking at the effect of fields that have routinely adopted the
model of widely disseminating pre-published results, this may not
be an appropriate model to apply to the medical sciences and the
NIH mandate. I'm not claiming that the NIH mandate will
necessarily do damage. It might do a lot of good, or have little
effect at all except to add a layer of administration. --Phil
Davis
original quote:
"accelerating the flow of scientific information in the informal
domain and expanding its dissemination is a problem precisely
because it occurs in systems that obscure the boundary between
the informal and formal domains. This boundary is one that
science has deliberately erected to curtail, temporarily, the
flow of information until the information has been examined
against the current state of knowledge in a discipline.
Non-scientists view procedure of curtailment as
ultra-conservative; experienced, practicing scientists perceive
it as the essential feature of science....The long judicious
procedure by which this conversion is made is unique to science.
To reorganize it for the sake of speed, or for open communication
with other spheres of intellectual endeavor, would almost
certainly dismantle the institution of science as we know it
today."
Garvey, W. D., & Griffith, B. C. (1971). Scientific
communication: Its role in the conduct of research and creation
of knowledge. American Psychologist, 26(4), 350-362. p.362