In our newest "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:
I know the mere thought of measuring success in philosophy might be unacceptable to some, but here’s where the question came from, at least to me. I just started my first job, a non-TT job. I have under 50 citations from 5 publications in leiterian journals. My brother-in-law, who has a non-TT job in one of the STEM fields, on the other hand, has over 30 publications and 200 citations. This is not coming from him, he’s totally a nice guy, but from the elders at the family table, belittling me because of my publication volume and citation count.
So generally, what would be a decent publication volume and citation count for philosophers? I know the answer will vary according to sub-disciplines and the “quality” of the publications. Or rather, how can one explain on the dining table that one’s doing ok-ish in research?
I'm really sorry to hear that this reader was belittled by family members. One reader submitted the following reply, which I entirely agree with:
I think you should avoid such dinner table conversations. If people do not understand that there are disciplinary differences, then you are going to find yourself engaging in some very unproductive conversations. My own career, especially the early stages, made no sense to my father who own and ran a business.
However, if the OP does want to respond to their belittling family members, the first thing they should know, I think, is that publication rates are vastly different across fields:
Second, citation rates are also stunningly high in many scientific fields, especially when compared to the humanities. Like, look at the following graph (lifted from here). The humanities are the line at the far bottom.
As the following graph demonstrates, this is at least in part explained by co-authoring, which is common in STEM but not humanities fields, especially philosophy:
So, even if one does measure success in terms of publication and citation rates, the OP has absolutely nothing to be ashamed of, particularly if they have nearly 50 citations just a year or two into their first job, as this seems to me spectacularly good for such an early point in one's career. That being said, it might be good to actually answer the OP's question, if not to satisfy their family members, but instead give them some idea what kinds of publication and citation rates are considered decent or good for the purposes of (A) getting a tenure-track job, and/or (B) tenure. This, in brief, is because I've heard that tenure committees do not always understand these kinds of disciplinary differences either, sometimes using publication and citation rates from their own fields to evaluate candidates for tenure and promotion in fields with very different standards.
So, then, in philosophy, "what would be a decent publication volume and citation count for philosophers" at particular stages of their career (i.e. on the job market, when coming up for tenure, etc.)? I too imagine that answers to this question are different at different places (SLACs, R1s, etc.), so it might be good to hear about some of these differences in the comments section!



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