Darrell Rowbottom (Lingnan University) has drawn my attention to a new paper of his forthcoming in British Journal for Philosophy of Science in which he defends pre-publication peer-review against a recent argument by Heesen and Bright for abolishing the practice altogether. Readers may recall that over the years, I've tried to stake out a middle ground in this debate: arguing for substantial changes to peer-review, but not its abolition. In brief, my own position has been that philosophy should probably transition toward the publication model practiced in math and physics, wherein it is standard practice to:
- Upload draft papers to the ArXiv (a preprint server similar to the PhilArchive).
- Share, discuss, and critique unpublished drafts openly (a kind of crowdsourced peer-review that weeds out bad papers and improves good papers before journal submission).
- Submit papers for peer-review at journals only after steps 1 and 2.
Although this model to a large extent undermines anonymous review (as people then know who has posted which papers to the ArXiv), my own sense is that the system works well and might help resolve a number of problems with our current peer-review system (including but not limited to: too many half-baked papers being submitted to journals, journal editors and referees being overwhelmed by submissions, etc.). So, then, we really have three options for peer-review in philosophy:
- Option 1 – keep the status quo: stick with the anonymized peer-review system we have.
- Option 2 - abolition: abolish pre-publication peer-review at journals altogether.
- Option 3 – reform: keep peer-review at journals, but adopt a practice of posting papers on online servers first so that they can be openly vetted (e.g. evaluated, criticized, etc.) before journal submission.
Which option do readers most support, and why – especially, let's say, after reading the papers by Rowbottom, Heesen and Bright? For some additional food for thought, readers may want to check out this story shared over at Daily Nous by Nathan Salmón (UC Santa Barbara).
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