Doctor Scratch wrote:The proof is in the pudding:
http://mi.BYU.edu/publications/review/If there were "non sympathizers" among the peer reviewers, I'm confident that the finished product would look very different. But, your goal has never been balance and fairness, so that's that.
By which Scratch admits that he has no actual knowledge of the peer review process itself. He simply thinks that the
FARMS Review ought not to be what it is, but ought to be what he would
like it to be, and concludes, on that basis, that the peer review process is rigged.
Absolutely!
Doctor Scratch wrote:I don't even need to defer to the phantom "fair-minded readers" you're always alluding to. I can name two actual people---Dr. Shades and Trevor, both of whom you yourself have praised for their "fairness," and both of whom side with my take on the Review. Trevor might disagree with the overall force, tenor, and word-choice of my assessment, but I think he'd agree generally that you guys have embraced an "attack dog" mentality. And Dr. Shades has echoed my take using almost verbatim language.
With all due respect for Shades, I don't grant his opinion on this matter much weight.
I give somewhat more to Trevor's, but, as you say, he's much less absolutist in his criticism than you are.
Look, I don't deny for a moment that there are, and will be, those who dislike the
FARMS Review. Especially among those who disagree with its overall stance. That goes with the territory. The
Review deals with controversial matters, and it does so from a pronounced position and in an often (though not always) forceful style, with an ironic and satirical bent. But many people
like the
Review -- including people whose opinions I value.
Doctor Scratch wrote:If you want to persuade people that "fair minded" readers (non-TBMs, presumably) see the Review the way you claim they will/do, you ought to cite actual people. Heck, even apologist sympathizers like Richard Bushman have chided you for your belligerence. You don't have a case here at all.
Please refresh my memory about Richard's comment. Incidentally, I'll be lecturing for him in one of his classes down there in Claremont next March. We just set that up yesterday.
I'm not going to cite names for you, but I've received very positive comments about the
Review from a number of reputable historians and other scholars, to say nothing of ordinary readers (one of whom, a complete stranger, stopped me at the airport last week, to make some embarrassingly positive comments about the
Review and my writing.) Some specifically get a kick out of its style and sense of humor.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Well, you don't know this for certain. For all you know, I *have* written for the Review, or I'm friends with one of the peer reviewers, etc. Best not to make assumptions, Dr. Peterson.
I'm quite confident that you haven't written for us. But, even if you had, how would that qualify you to make any comments about the overall peer review system that we run? You would only know what went on between you and me (or, perhaps, between yourself and one of my other editors). You would know nothing, thereby, about the identities of any of the other peer reviewers (and, very possibly, not even the identities of those who reviewed your own piece), and you would know nothing about their interactions with me, which are confidential.
The same would be true if you were a
friend of one of our peer reviewers. (D you
have friends?) Knowing one would identify none of the others. Knowing what he said would tell you nothing about any of the others, nor about their interactions with the
Review's editors.
Please try to make at least minimal sense.
Doctor Scratch wrote:The bad parts of the Review persist, probably due in part to your malign influence.
LOL. I certainly hope so!
Boo!