| Journal of Theoretics
Vol. 6-5, Oct/Nov 2004
Editorial
|
What I have learned from the last 5
years as Editor
By being a general science theory
journal we did not fit any niche.
There definitely was and is a
need for a journal such as ours but we were difficult to pigeonhole and did
not get much traction by the mainstream. Not only did we accept articles
from all fields of science, we focused on the development of theory. Rather
than single hypothesis papers, we encouraged and desired theory integration
and development for a better understanding of the universe.
The Journal of Theoretics facilitated the sharing of theories and
ideas.
By offering a forum
for intelligent and viable articles whose theories did not fit the usual
niches of scientific publication, we advanced
Science. From our Comments section to the correspondence with authors
that frequently occurred, theory development was facilitated. It has
frequently occurred that one paper will even inspire another to go further
with a paper of their own.
There are brilliant people out there who are not being tapped
effectively.
I am a fairly
intelligent individual but the brilliance of our many of our authors has
frequently impressed me and other readers alike. Also academic credentials
did not seem to play any role in how brilliant an article was.
We offered publication for great articles from people for whom English
is difficult and their articles would have been rejected by other journals.
One of the most
difficult but most rewarding tasks we have had is to help foreign authors
who have had great theories but their English has kept them from getting
published. This goes along with one of our tenants which was to not only to
publish articles but to work with the authors to get their theories ready
for publication.
We developed a new type of review process.
Rather than a
author having to prove that his theory is right to the reviewer, we had to
prove that his/her theory was wrong. This acceptance criterion I believe is
unique and though it was more work, the results were worth it.
Articles which develop theory do not fit the accepted publication
format of mainstream journals.
Hence these types
of articles do not get published. One of the first decisions that we made,
was to not hold authors to a rigid format. A theory’s scientific field,
complexity, and more will determine the format in which it needs to be
explained and shown to be scientifically viable. No one format will work and
the author is given leeway in determining the best way to present it.
Graduate students should be required to take courses in logic and
theory development.
Courses such as
these for graduate science students are rarely required but are key to
advancing Science.
Theoretics will hopefully go on and one day have the scientific
influence that it deserves.
Dr. Siepmann,
Editor
Journal of Theoretics
Journal Home
Page
Email
comments/questions to:
archive@journaloftheoretics.com
© Journal of Theoretics, Inc. 2004 |