Publish or Perish |
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Authors: | Benjamin Davies Giulia Felappi |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Philosophy, Religion and History of Science, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom;2. Department of Philosophy, University of Southampton Highfield Rd., Southampton SO17 1BF, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Funds and positions in philosophy should be awarded through systems that are reliable, objective, and efficient. One question usually taken to be relevant is how many publications people have in a group of well‐respected journals. In the context of significant competition for jobs and funding, however, relying on quantity of publications creates a serious downside: the oft‐lamented demand that we publish or perish. This article offers a systematic review of the problems involved in contemporary academic philosophy, and argues that the resulting situation is bad not just for individual philosophers but also for philosophy itself: we are not working as a discipline to as high a standard as we might. The article then suggests some potential solutions, including some more detailed considerations around what seems a particularly promising option: a professional code of conduct for philosophers. |
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Keywords: | academic publishing code of conduct journal submissions Grice publish or perish |
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