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by QuesnayJr
1943 days ago
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Pointing to the top journals is again a statement about who is well-connected, so if anything it is further proof of my claim of elite provincialism. Mathematics has politics, like any other field, and it's politics that determine that the proof of the Robertson-Seymour Theorem appeared in the "Journal of Combinatorial Theory" and not JAMS. The irony is that I suspect every single mathematician, elite or not, knows what the four-color theorem is, far more than could tell you what chromatic homotopy is, or state anything about the Langlands program beyond "Uh, it's something about number theory? And groups? Maybe?" |
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Further, it's not like no finite combinatorics/graph theory gets published in these journals. Just not a lot, because it's not sufficiently interesting/valuable to the broader community. (Annals of Math almost published Hales's proof of the Kepler conjecture, after all; eventually a proof appeared in another top journal.)
Also, re: connections, you can easily check the author affiliations for papers in these journals. There are plenty of people from universities that are not so well known. It's hardly an "old boys club."