I can’t speak to this particular article, but oftentimes special editions of journals, like this one (i.e. effectively a symposium on the work of another), are not subjected to rigorous peer review. The responses are often solicited by the editors and there is minimal correction or critique of the content of the papers, certainly nothing like you’d normally get for an unsolicited article in a top philosophy journal.
But, to reiterate, I can’t say whether or not the Journal of Consciousness Studies did that in this instance.
I can’t speak to this particular article, but oftentimes special editions of journals, like this one (i.e. effectively a symposium on the work of another), are not subjected to rigorous peer review.
On the one hand, this is the cached defense that I have for the Sokal hoax, so now I have an internal conflict on my hands. If I believe that Tipler’s paper shouldn’t have been published, then it’s unclear why Sokal’s should have been.
I can’t speak to this particular article, but oftentimes special editions of journals, like this one (i.e. effectively a symposium on the work of another), are not subjected to rigorous peer review. The responses are often solicited by the editors and there is minimal correction or critique of the content of the papers, certainly nothing like you’d normally get for an unsolicited article in a top philosophy journal.
But, to reiterate, I can’t say whether or not the Journal of Consciousness Studies did that in this instance.
On the one hand, this is the cached defense that I have for the Sokal hoax, so now I have an internal conflict on my hands. If I believe that Tipler’s paper shouldn’t have been published, then it’s unclear why Sokal’s should have been.
Oh dear, oh dear. How to resolve this conflict?
Perhaps rum...