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by JoeAltmaier 4391 days ago
My point was the one you just made - "Editors are human, and if they see something that looks nothing like a scientific paper, it's much more likely to trigger the "crank" flag than to be seen as a breakthrough paper."

The format is the message to some degree. Lazy editors help perpetuate this as you suggest.

1 comments

It's been 50 years since McLuhan's "The medium is the message". It's not really an aspect of laziness, but intrinsic to all communications.

If you are an editor and you receive a 100 page treatise which starts out with 50 pages on the numerology of the Great Seal of the US, 25 pages on the quality of the author's boogers, and 24 pages tracking the lineage of David Hasselhoff back to Adam, then are you really "lazy" if you missed the elegant 1 page proof of Fermat's Last Theorem on page 78?

Odds are most editors would reject that paper after reading the first page or two and leafing through the rest to double-check that it was more of the same dreck. Yes, I would place the fault more on the author than the editor for this case. Wouldn't you?

Strawman. Instead suppose you received the letter Tomas Hardy received from a crank called Ramanujan a century ago. Today mightn't it be dismissed out of hand? And missed one of the stellar minds of the millennia.