Search Results for "Philosophical Transactions"
Unravelling domestication
publishingGuest Editor Dr Rosalind Gillis (Deutsches Archäologiches Institut) tells us about her new theme issue of Philosophical Transactions B, ‘Unravelling domestication: multi-disciplinary perspectives on human and non-human relationships in the past, present and future’.
One of my dreams has always been to publish at least one paper in Philosophical Transactions
publishingTo celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Professor SA Sherif to tell us what publishing with the journal means to them.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Dr Mark A. Hanson to tell us what publishing with the journal means to him.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Dr Mathilde Massenet to tell us what publishing with the journal means to her.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Dr. Damya Souami to tell us what publishing with the journal means to her.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Shun-Peng Zhu to tell us what publishing with the journal means to him.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the start of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Conrad Wasko to tell us what publishing with the journal means to him.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editors Roel van Klink and Julie Koch Sheard to tell us what publishing with the journal means to them.
To celebrate the 360th anniversary of the Philosophical Transactions, we have invited Guest Editor Hirohito M Kondo to tell us what publishing with the journal means to him.
As part of the celebrations of the 360th anniversary of the Philosophical Transactions, we thought that it would be interesting to look at some of the trends and changes in the journal since its first publication in 1665.
Unnoticed Letters
publishingRobert Hooke, Isaac Newton, and the Royal Society
Peer review has been a cornerstone of the Royal Society publishing process since the early 1830s. Historian Aileen Fyfe discusses here the evolution of pre-publication decision making at the Royal Society, leading to the referee reports employed by journals today.