Commenting on my Peer Disagreement & Peer Review post, Joe writes:
The external referee should judge whether the manuscript is worthy of publication (E.g., Is there an argument? Does the conclusion follow from its premises? Etc.)
Now, if manuscripts are deemed publishable or not based on the quality of their argument, then what could a referee mean by saying "This paper is good but not good enough to be published in Prestigious Journal"? (I've received this sort of comment from referees on several occasions.)
Presumably, if a paper is good, then it makes a good argument (i.e., the conclusion follows from the premises and the premises are true/probable/plausible). If that's the case, then on what grounds can such a paper be said to be "good but not good enough for Prestigious Journal"?
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