Why won't good journals retract papers that were proven wrong?
I saw some research papers still present in good and reputed journals even though they were proven wrong by other papers. The subject is cryptography.
If a paper is proven wrong, it does not contribute a valid result to the corresponding topic. What is the reason for keeping them intact, which can cause issues for newbies?
journals retraction
|
show 6 more comments
I saw some research papers still present in good and reputed journals even though they were proven wrong by other papers. The subject is cryptography.
If a paper is proven wrong, it does not contribute a valid result to the corresponding topic. What is the reason for keeping them intact, which can cause issues for newbies?
journals retraction
26
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
18
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
12
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
20
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
11
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32
|
show 6 more comments
I saw some research papers still present in good and reputed journals even though they were proven wrong by other papers. The subject is cryptography.
If a paper is proven wrong, it does not contribute a valid result to the corresponding topic. What is the reason for keeping them intact, which can cause issues for newbies?
journals retraction
I saw some research papers still present in good and reputed journals even though they were proven wrong by other papers. The subject is cryptography.
If a paper is proven wrong, it does not contribute a valid result to the corresponding topic. What is the reason for keeping them intact, which can cause issues for newbies?
journals retraction
journals retraction
edited Feb 10 at 18:59
jakebeal
149k31535777
149k31535777
asked Feb 10 at 17:36
hanugmhanugm
1,38421625
1,38421625
26
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
18
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
12
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
20
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
11
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32
|
show 6 more comments
26
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
18
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
12
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
20
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
11
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32
26
26
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
18
18
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
12
12
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
20
20
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
11
11
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32
|
show 6 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Without knowing the specifics of the papers you are referring to, it's difficult to respond exactly. In general, however, there is more than one way for a paper to be "wrong", and most "wrong" papers should not be retracted.
The thing is, a paper typically contains more than just a single assertion. When you say that a paper is "proven wrong", it sounds like you are referring to the high-level conclusion, e.g., "Cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks." Then somebody else comes along and shows that actually, there is a way to do a replay attack after all.
Such a refutation, however, often does not actually invalidate any of the actual technical methods or results presented in the original paper. Instead, it will more typically involve showing that they were insufficient in some way for supporting the high-level conclusion. For example, the problem statement might have been formulated too narrowly, or the authors might have drawn a conclusion that was stronger than their evidence actually supported.
In such a case the conclusion of the paper may indeed be wrong, but everything else is indeed correct. Careful phrasing by the original author may in fact mean that the conclusion is even still technically correct (e.g., "According to this formulation, cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks."). In short, the results stand but their implications are much less than the original investigator may have believed.
Bottom line: many refutations may be understood as changing our interpretation of results derived using valid methods, while retraction is generally reserved for invalidating flaws in the methods themselves.
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
add a comment |
Think of the history of scientific papers as being something like an informally maintained blockchain. The integrity of all depends on the continued presence of the old things whether they have been superseded or not. Even if they have been superseded for errors. The reason for this is that things get referenced in newer work. The new things may be corrections or may, in fact, rest on a shaky ground. But future researchers need to be able to resurrect all of the contextual history of ideas and their expression so that science can advance without needing to start over whenever something is found wanting.
In fact, if an old paper is made to somehow disappear and a newer one covers the same ground, but correctly, then the newer authors are, arguably subject to claims of plagiarism since they "used" some of the old words and ideas that they weren't able to find by searching the literature. There are likely old versions of the (incorrect) paper cached in various places. Better for the old paper to remain in place so that references to it, especially correcting references, remain valid.
In some fields, having access to old, incorrect, papers can be especially valuable to a student. If the superstars of a field go wrong in proving something important, it is useful to know how they went wrong. That way, similar errors can possibly be avoided in the future. In analysis, for example proofs that contain lots of conditional clauses with quantifiers (for every, there exists, ...) can easily get out of control and hard to follow. Many of these have actually occurred in the literature. It can be fun to find them, and not so easy, in many cases, to correct them.
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
add a comment |
In many fields, and probably especially cryptography, the evidence of an incorrect result can be very relevant either:
1) to reduce the effort in a “wrong” or incorrect or less-fruitfull direction,
2) to provide an impetus towards a solution or a solution for another direction or method.
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "415"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f124713%2fwhy-wont-good-journals-retract-papers-that-were-proven-wrong%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Without knowing the specifics of the papers you are referring to, it's difficult to respond exactly. In general, however, there is more than one way for a paper to be "wrong", and most "wrong" papers should not be retracted.
The thing is, a paper typically contains more than just a single assertion. When you say that a paper is "proven wrong", it sounds like you are referring to the high-level conclusion, e.g., "Cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks." Then somebody else comes along and shows that actually, there is a way to do a replay attack after all.
Such a refutation, however, often does not actually invalidate any of the actual technical methods or results presented in the original paper. Instead, it will more typically involve showing that they were insufficient in some way for supporting the high-level conclusion. For example, the problem statement might have been formulated too narrowly, or the authors might have drawn a conclusion that was stronger than their evidence actually supported.
In such a case the conclusion of the paper may indeed be wrong, but everything else is indeed correct. Careful phrasing by the original author may in fact mean that the conclusion is even still technically correct (e.g., "According to this formulation, cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks."). In short, the results stand but their implications are much less than the original investigator may have believed.
Bottom line: many refutations may be understood as changing our interpretation of results derived using valid methods, while retraction is generally reserved for invalidating flaws in the methods themselves.
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
add a comment |
Without knowing the specifics of the papers you are referring to, it's difficult to respond exactly. In general, however, there is more than one way for a paper to be "wrong", and most "wrong" papers should not be retracted.
The thing is, a paper typically contains more than just a single assertion. When you say that a paper is "proven wrong", it sounds like you are referring to the high-level conclusion, e.g., "Cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks." Then somebody else comes along and shows that actually, there is a way to do a replay attack after all.
Such a refutation, however, often does not actually invalidate any of the actual technical methods or results presented in the original paper. Instead, it will more typically involve showing that they were insufficient in some way for supporting the high-level conclusion. For example, the problem statement might have been formulated too narrowly, or the authors might have drawn a conclusion that was stronger than their evidence actually supported.
In such a case the conclusion of the paper may indeed be wrong, but everything else is indeed correct. Careful phrasing by the original author may in fact mean that the conclusion is even still technically correct (e.g., "According to this formulation, cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks."). In short, the results stand but their implications are much less than the original investigator may have believed.
Bottom line: many refutations may be understood as changing our interpretation of results derived using valid methods, while retraction is generally reserved for invalidating flaws in the methods themselves.
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
add a comment |
Without knowing the specifics of the papers you are referring to, it's difficult to respond exactly. In general, however, there is more than one way for a paper to be "wrong", and most "wrong" papers should not be retracted.
The thing is, a paper typically contains more than just a single assertion. When you say that a paper is "proven wrong", it sounds like you are referring to the high-level conclusion, e.g., "Cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks." Then somebody else comes along and shows that actually, there is a way to do a replay attack after all.
Such a refutation, however, often does not actually invalidate any of the actual technical methods or results presented in the original paper. Instead, it will more typically involve showing that they were insufficient in some way for supporting the high-level conclusion. For example, the problem statement might have been formulated too narrowly, or the authors might have drawn a conclusion that was stronger than their evidence actually supported.
In such a case the conclusion of the paper may indeed be wrong, but everything else is indeed correct. Careful phrasing by the original author may in fact mean that the conclusion is even still technically correct (e.g., "According to this formulation, cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks."). In short, the results stand but their implications are much less than the original investigator may have believed.
Bottom line: many refutations may be understood as changing our interpretation of results derived using valid methods, while retraction is generally reserved for invalidating flaws in the methods themselves.
Without knowing the specifics of the papers you are referring to, it's difficult to respond exactly. In general, however, there is more than one way for a paper to be "wrong", and most "wrong" papers should not be retracted.
The thing is, a paper typically contains more than just a single assertion. When you say that a paper is "proven wrong", it sounds like you are referring to the high-level conclusion, e.g., "Cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks." Then somebody else comes along and shows that actually, there is a way to do a replay attack after all.
Such a refutation, however, often does not actually invalidate any of the actual technical methods or results presented in the original paper. Instead, it will more typically involve showing that they were insufficient in some way for supporting the high-level conclusion. For example, the problem statement might have been formulated too narrowly, or the authors might have drawn a conclusion that was stronger than their evidence actually supported.
In such a case the conclusion of the paper may indeed be wrong, but everything else is indeed correct. Careful phrasing by the original author may in fact mean that the conclusion is even still technically correct (e.g., "According to this formulation, cryptographic protocol X is secure against replay attacks."). In short, the results stand but their implications are much less than the original investigator may have believed.
Bottom line: many refutations may be understood as changing our interpretation of results derived using valid methods, while retraction is generally reserved for invalidating flaws in the methods themselves.
answered Feb 10 at 18:59
jakebealjakebeal
149k31535777
149k31535777
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
add a comment |
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
+1. In a sense, a great deal of crypto is all about proving things "wrong." If we didn't actively propose new ideas and attempt to find flaws, I'd hate to think of the current state.
– Randall
Feb 11 at 19:26
add a comment |
Think of the history of scientific papers as being something like an informally maintained blockchain. The integrity of all depends on the continued presence of the old things whether they have been superseded or not. Even if they have been superseded for errors. The reason for this is that things get referenced in newer work. The new things may be corrections or may, in fact, rest on a shaky ground. But future researchers need to be able to resurrect all of the contextual history of ideas and their expression so that science can advance without needing to start over whenever something is found wanting.
In fact, if an old paper is made to somehow disappear and a newer one covers the same ground, but correctly, then the newer authors are, arguably subject to claims of plagiarism since they "used" some of the old words and ideas that they weren't able to find by searching the literature. There are likely old versions of the (incorrect) paper cached in various places. Better for the old paper to remain in place so that references to it, especially correcting references, remain valid.
In some fields, having access to old, incorrect, papers can be especially valuable to a student. If the superstars of a field go wrong in proving something important, it is useful to know how they went wrong. That way, similar errors can possibly be avoided in the future. In analysis, for example proofs that contain lots of conditional clauses with quantifiers (for every, there exists, ...) can easily get out of control and hard to follow. Many of these have actually occurred in the literature. It can be fun to find them, and not so easy, in many cases, to correct them.
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
add a comment |
Think of the history of scientific papers as being something like an informally maintained blockchain. The integrity of all depends on the continued presence of the old things whether they have been superseded or not. Even if they have been superseded for errors. The reason for this is that things get referenced in newer work. The new things may be corrections or may, in fact, rest on a shaky ground. But future researchers need to be able to resurrect all of the contextual history of ideas and their expression so that science can advance without needing to start over whenever something is found wanting.
In fact, if an old paper is made to somehow disappear and a newer one covers the same ground, but correctly, then the newer authors are, arguably subject to claims of plagiarism since they "used" some of the old words and ideas that they weren't able to find by searching the literature. There are likely old versions of the (incorrect) paper cached in various places. Better for the old paper to remain in place so that references to it, especially correcting references, remain valid.
In some fields, having access to old, incorrect, papers can be especially valuable to a student. If the superstars of a field go wrong in proving something important, it is useful to know how they went wrong. That way, similar errors can possibly be avoided in the future. In analysis, for example proofs that contain lots of conditional clauses with quantifiers (for every, there exists, ...) can easily get out of control and hard to follow. Many of these have actually occurred in the literature. It can be fun to find them, and not so easy, in many cases, to correct them.
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
add a comment |
Think of the history of scientific papers as being something like an informally maintained blockchain. The integrity of all depends on the continued presence of the old things whether they have been superseded or not. Even if they have been superseded for errors. The reason for this is that things get referenced in newer work. The new things may be corrections or may, in fact, rest on a shaky ground. But future researchers need to be able to resurrect all of the contextual history of ideas and their expression so that science can advance without needing to start over whenever something is found wanting.
In fact, if an old paper is made to somehow disappear and a newer one covers the same ground, but correctly, then the newer authors are, arguably subject to claims of plagiarism since they "used" some of the old words and ideas that they weren't able to find by searching the literature. There are likely old versions of the (incorrect) paper cached in various places. Better for the old paper to remain in place so that references to it, especially correcting references, remain valid.
In some fields, having access to old, incorrect, papers can be especially valuable to a student. If the superstars of a field go wrong in proving something important, it is useful to know how they went wrong. That way, similar errors can possibly be avoided in the future. In analysis, for example proofs that contain lots of conditional clauses with quantifiers (for every, there exists, ...) can easily get out of control and hard to follow. Many of these have actually occurred in the literature. It can be fun to find them, and not so easy, in many cases, to correct them.
Think of the history of scientific papers as being something like an informally maintained blockchain. The integrity of all depends on the continued presence of the old things whether they have been superseded or not. Even if they have been superseded for errors. The reason for this is that things get referenced in newer work. The new things may be corrections or may, in fact, rest on a shaky ground. But future researchers need to be able to resurrect all of the contextual history of ideas and their expression so that science can advance without needing to start over whenever something is found wanting.
In fact, if an old paper is made to somehow disappear and a newer one covers the same ground, but correctly, then the newer authors are, arguably subject to claims of plagiarism since they "used" some of the old words and ideas that they weren't able to find by searching the literature. There are likely old versions of the (incorrect) paper cached in various places. Better for the old paper to remain in place so that references to it, especially correcting references, remain valid.
In some fields, having access to old, incorrect, papers can be especially valuable to a student. If the superstars of a field go wrong in proving something important, it is useful to know how they went wrong. That way, similar errors can possibly be avoided in the future. In analysis, for example proofs that contain lots of conditional clauses with quantifiers (for every, there exists, ...) can easily get out of control and hard to follow. Many of these have actually occurred in the literature. It can be fun to find them, and not so easy, in many cases, to correct them.
edited Feb 10 at 23:56
answered Feb 10 at 22:22
BuffyBuffy
57.3k17181277
57.3k17181277
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
add a comment |
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
1
1
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
Exactly. This aids in future research. "Smith (1990) claimed that a hyperparallelized matrix can be shown to be closed in fivespace by applying a transverse coordinate swap to the complex manifold, but Jones (2003) demonstrated that that result only applies in five-spaces with polynomial bases. In this paper, I generalize a proof of how to determine whether a fivespace hyperparallelized matrix is closed..."
– Robert Columbia
Feb 11 at 16:34
2
2
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
Simplest case: Publications by Newton and others. Clearly, at that time ideas of light particles and the Newtonian gravity were right (explained observations at the time) but later on have been shown to be either special cases (GR) or highly insufficient (photons, duality of waves and particles).
– Nox
Feb 12 at 10:55
add a comment |
In many fields, and probably especially cryptography, the evidence of an incorrect result can be very relevant either:
1) to reduce the effort in a “wrong” or incorrect or less-fruitfull direction,
2) to provide an impetus towards a solution or a solution for another direction or method.
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
add a comment |
In many fields, and probably especially cryptography, the evidence of an incorrect result can be very relevant either:
1) to reduce the effort in a “wrong” or incorrect or less-fruitfull direction,
2) to provide an impetus towards a solution or a solution for another direction or method.
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
add a comment |
In many fields, and probably especially cryptography, the evidence of an incorrect result can be very relevant either:
1) to reduce the effort in a “wrong” or incorrect or less-fruitfull direction,
2) to provide an impetus towards a solution or a solution for another direction or method.
In many fields, and probably especially cryptography, the evidence of an incorrect result can be very relevant either:
1) to reduce the effort in a “wrong” or incorrect or less-fruitfull direction,
2) to provide an impetus towards a solution or a solution for another direction or method.
answered Feb 10 at 19:01
Solar MikeSolar Mike
14.9k52654
14.9k52654
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
add a comment |
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
4
4
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
Exactly. There is much more information in "wrong article + article explaining why the previous article was wrong" than in "no article at all".
– Eric Duminil
Feb 11 at 9:59
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
@EricDuminil Articles that are retracted still are available to read online, they just are noted prominently as retracted. Of course, there's no way of recalling all of the printed versions either. So a retraction would serve to put a "here is what happened" notice on top of the old article.
– user71659
Feb 11 at 19:09
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Academia Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f124713%2fwhy-wont-good-journals-retract-papers-that-were-proven-wrong%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
26
What do you mean by wrong? Not entirely correct according to the current state of knowledge (but plausible at the time of submission), something like proving that every prime number is even, or some particular instances between these two extremes?
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:43
18
Do you have a particular field in mind? Proving wrong in mathematics is totally different than in, e.g., soft sciences.
– corey979
Feb 10 at 17:53
12
If they have been cited, then basically you are advocating ripping apart the basis for understanding and progressing knowledge. That is a horrible thing to contemplate much less actually do.
– Jon Custer
Feb 10 at 18:02
20
Isaac Newton's book "Principia Mathematica" has been proven wrong by experiments confirming General Relativity. Does that mean it should be removed from the history of science? It might mislead newbies into thinking of gravity as a force.
– Patricia Shanahan
Feb 10 at 18:28
11
Well, if we're talking about retraction, then I don't understand @JonCuster's point, since retracted papers don't disappear.
– Nate Eldredge
Feb 10 at 18:32