Sapper Redux said:KingofHazor said:Sapper Redux said:KingofHazor said:Sapper Redux said:
It's funny how these studies are always printed by the same people and in predatory journals that charge a fee to publish. The sample was selected by the Church. I'm sure researchers would be happy to repeat the experiment on another part of the Shroud. Still, the original sample was well analyzed and was not a repair, nor any more damaged than other parts of the Shroud.
Since when is Entropy considered a "predatory journal"?
It's an open access journal where all fees are paid by the authors and it speed-runs peer review. The publisher is a well-known purveyor of this kind of predatory academic publishing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MDPI
Google AI disagrees with you:Quote:
Entropy is generally considered a legitimate, albeit polarizing, peer-reviewed journal published by MDPI, not a typical "predatory" journal. It is indexed in major databases like Scopus and Web of Science (SCIE) and has a reasonable impact factor. However, it is often criticized for fast publication times and high volumes of special issues, leading to debates regarding its peer-review quality.
It is also valid enough to be republished by PubMed which means that it was extensively peer reviewed. So your attempts make ad hominem attacks on the journal seem ill-founded.
I love how your quote acknowledges the evidence supporting my position and admits its validity as a concern and you turn around and say, "See! It's a baseless ad hominem attack!"
Well, you did say that it is "predatory" and that it "speed runs peer review". What evidence do you have to support that? The evidence I presented is that it is not labeled as "predatory" and that even if peer review is "speed run" at the journal level (unknown), it is required to get re-published in PubMed.
"Ad hominem" attacks are essentially attacks on the provider of information, rather than the information itself. That's exactly what you did. You couldn't address the paper itself, so you attacked the publisher.