Editorial. "The Establishment" in Science - Analytical Chemistry (ACS

"The Establishment" in Science. Herbert A. Laitinen. Anal. Chem. , 1968, 40 (3), pp 473–473. DOI: 10.1021/ac60259a600. Publication Date: March 1968...
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A NALVTICAL CHEMISTRY EDITORIAL

March 1968,Vol. 40, No. 3 Editor:

H E R B E R T A. LAITINEN

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“The Establishment” in Science we hear a coinplaint t h a t science has built around itself a closed society into which it is impossible to penetrate without the formal credentials of degrees from respected institutions of higher learning, association with established research institutions, and membership in learned societies. Such complaints generally originate, naturally enough, from individuals who lack these formal credentials and who feel that their ideas have no chance of acceptance because the scientific journals, being operated by “the establishment” mill ignore ideas from the outside. It would, indeed, be a serious indictiiient of the system if there were any appreciable substance to such complaints. The modern systein of scientific publication has developed from Lhe need for communication among research workers. Such conimunications, a t first primarily carried out by personal correspondence, developed into meetings of scientific academies where differences of opinion could be debated. A natural outgrowth of such meetings was a written record of the proceedings, which gradually emerged into the scientific literature as we know it today. The essence of this system is that a scientific contribution is accepted as a n honest representation of the truth in the best judgment of the author, as supported by evidence t h a t is subject to the examination of other scientists. The scientific reputation of an individual rests on the significance of his contributions t h a t have stood the test of experimental and theoretical examination. The “establishment” of science is precisely the fabric of knowledge, ranging from the highly tentative to the firmly established. .4ny scientist will acknowledge that the difference in these extremes ib merely a difference of degree, and t h a t the entire structure of knowledge is subject to continual re-examination. The system of review of manuscripts by one’s peers before acceptance for publication is one t h a t has developed with the growing complexity of science. It serves the authors, editors, and readers in providing a safeguard against an innocent or willful disregard for the past literature. It is characteristic of the amateur or “extra-establishment” contribution that his work attacks one of the “firmly established” ideas without properly acknowledging and considering the evidence t h a t led to its acceptance. It is not merely a custom or rule that dictates the procedure, but the very substance of the scientific method. It happens t h a t it is unlikely in today’s society for significant contributions to be made by someone lacking the customary credentials, but there is nothing inherent in the system that would deny this possibility.

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For submission of manuscripts, see page 2 A . VOL. 40, NO. 3, MARCH 1968

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