Subject: Conservation literature
This is in reference to Jack Ogden's comment about abstract vs article publication and my feedback. I have some problems with the idea that some research is inherently better because it has been published in peer reviewed articles vs that which might come from bench workers reporting their observations. One can learn quite a bit about how the edifice of our scientific knowledge has been build up by "amateurs" and self-taught practitioners from Wendt's, In Search of Adam. One does not have to refer to the battle of titans like Cuvier and Lamark to know that a degree does not produce the most insightful or useful products or important advances in science. Reading through Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions one learns how entrenched generations of titled scientists can stifle advances simply because they challenge authority or are from the "uncredentialed". Just as there have been the cases of scholars publishing their student's ideas (not all end-of-term papers are bad) I do not have absolute confidence in peer review either. I am all for the "succinct" (I suppose here Dr. Ogden means useful or brilliant) as opposed to the superficial, but I do dislike editorial arrogance which simply reflects the privilege of authority. Niccolo Caldararo *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:77 Distributed: Thursday, May 16, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-77-004 ***Received on Thursday, 16 May, 2002