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Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments November 2018 David Adger Professor of Linguistics at Queen Mary University of London. “Thanks for the hardcopy of the last issue. It was really interesting,” Egil Asprem Associate Professor in the History of Religions at Stockholm University. “It is exciting to see text moving toward production - and quite an impressive job by the editors in cutting the text so much while retaining the essentials in an elegant way!” “It's been a pleasure working with you!” Pamela Asquith Professor of Anthropology, University of Alberta. “The journal looks very interesting indeed and I feel it is an honor to be invited to contribute.” Jeremy Avigad Professor of Philosophy at Carnegie Mellon University. “I have been reading and enjoying a number of articles in Inference. I am impressed; it is a very nice publication.” Jeremy Bersntein Professor emeritus of physics at the Stevens Institute of Technology. “So many thanks. This worked out very well. The editing was excellent although the caricature of me looked more like Donald Trump than me! I hope to work with you in the future” “I read the issue with great interest and was pleased to see my quantum there.” “I thank the editors for their good editing. ” 1 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Robert Berwick Professor of Computational Linguistics and Computer Science and Engineering at MIT. “I am truly delighted that you and others have started publishing such a journal as Inference, which touches on so many of my own concerns and interests - I have been meaning for years to write articles on evolutionary theory (some like the fine ones you’ve already published); on big data and its discontents (I have one on the deep troubles with deep learning); on the sloppy connectome neuroscience (which you’ve covered); and so on - in fact, many of the topics on your “hit list”. Your abbreviations alone are priceless.” Simon Blackburn Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge. “Many thanks for the new issue link and for the prompt payment. Unusual in the publishing world.” “Fascinating. I had not realised how high you aimed.” Ralph Blumenthal Former reporter for The New York Times. “Thanks, looks impressive. Unable to take on anything else now but will keep in mind.” Cedric Boeckx Research Professor at the Catalan Institute for Advanced Studies. “Thanks for your invitation to contribute to Inference, your patience & advice. I think it came out nicely.” Alexander Bogomolny Cut The Knot blog. “I loved the journal - very broadly informative. I plan to making references to a few articles.” 2 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments William Briggs Independent writer, statistician, scientist and consultant. “It would be my honor to accept your invitation. I know your journal. I especially like George Ellis's latest essay.” John Brooke Professor of History and Anthropology and Director of the Center for Historical Research at Ohio State. “Many thanks – I have been spending the last few minutes reading these letters, you have put together an excellent body of commentary.” Umberto Cannella Physicist and currently educational specialist for the Swiss Space Center at the Polytechnic Federal Institute in Lausanne. “I very much enjoyed the final form of the essay: the editing has really improved its completeness and readibility. The caricature was a nice plus of the collaboration: it was a pleasure to work with Inference and I do hope to contribute again in the future.” James Carny Brunel University London. “I read Inference with great interest, and consider it to be one of the most useful publications for intelligent and challenging writing across all the disciplines.” Gregory Chaitin Professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. “I enjoyed very much the pieces by David Berlinski and Kusala Rajendran. Looking forward to reading Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?, a terrific title.” 3 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Swapan Chattopadhyay Presidential Chair for Research, Scholarship and Artistry, Professor and Director of Accelerator Research at Northern Illinois University. “Many thanks for seeking me out and your message. I am very impressed by the quality of individuals who have contributed to your on-line journal and its peer-less and informal character, which is conducive to creative and innovative expression.” Noam Chomsky American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist. “Looks like a fascinating issue, with a lot of material of special interest for me.” “Many thanks for sending. Much enlightening reading ahead.” “Many thanks for sending. Glad to see it. And the whole issue too, as always.” Marcin Chrząszcz Physicist at the University of Zurich. “Thank you for the new issue of Inference. I see my good friend Joaquim Matias has written an article about my measurement :) Looking forward reading more in details!” Arthur Cody American philosopher emeritus at San José State College in California. “I have read several of the articles in the current Inference. I liked them all. You all, the editors, have worked very hard, I see, at getting the papers in a readable but not a condescending shape.” John Colarusso Comparative linguist at McMaster University. “It is an extraordinary journal. Fascinating!” “I am so pleased to have had a chance to contribute to it.” 4 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Simon Conway Morris English palaeontologist, evolutionary biologist, and astrobiologist. “Thank you for your e-mail as well as sending me earlier a recent copy of Inference. In principle I'd be happy to contribute a piece.” Jay Cordes Data scientist at Berkeley. “In addition to Data Science, I’m also very interested in Quantum Mechanics, so I may have to subscribe to your journal; it looks fantastic!” Emanuel Derman South African-born academic, businessman and writer. “I’ve been enjoying very much reading Inference while I’ve been writing. It’s an amazing endeavor and I wonder how it got started.” Niall Ferguson senior fellow of the Hoover Institution, Stanford, and the Center for European Studies, Harvard. “Your new journal sounds excellent.” Robert Freidin Professor emeritus in the Council of the Humanities in the Philosophy Department at Princeton University. “Thanks again for the opportunity to write about linguistics for a general audience. It was an interesting and educational experience. I wish you great success with your journal.” 5 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Kieran Fox Postdoc in Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford. “I had not heard of Inference before but I looked into it and it looks like you have created a really classy and thoughtful venue. I was very impressed with the quality of the work and the list of illustrious contributors. I'm honored to be invited to contribute.” Sheldon Glashow Nobel Prize, Metcalf Professor of Mathematics and Physics at Boston University and Higgins Professor of Physics, emeritus, at Harvard University. “I am honored to become an author for Inference.” “Indeed I enjoyed the latest issue, and not just my own contribution. The editing process was most professional.” Sharon Glotzer Distinguished University Professor of Engineering and the Stuart W. Churchill Collegiate. “I am impressed with your journal having now read several articles.” Alex Golub Associate professor at the Department of anthropology, University of Hawaï. “I was not aware of your journal before receiving your message, and having read some of the reviews on your site I am impressed with the quality of both the authors and the content.” Monica Green American historian and Professor of History at Arizona State University. “I saw it last night. Thank you so much. It’s already getting a lot of attention on Twitter.” 6 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments John Hawks Associate professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. “Thanks for getting in touch with me! I did see Tattersall’s essay and really like the way that you handled that. It is a very nice format, and gives a great opportunity for a deeper discussion of scientific issues like this one.” “I received a copy of Inference. I have been impressed by the work that I have seen published by other researchers in Inference.” William von Hippel Professor and former head of the School of Psychology at the University of Queensland. “Thanks, looks very interesting!” Roald Hoffmann Nobel Prize in Chemistry. “I really enjoyed your article in Inference, because you really tried to convey to a general educated audience what a synthesis is like. It is not easy, and I have tried.” Gerald Holton American physicist, historian of science, and educator. “Thank you for sending me Mr. Glashow's remarkable and engaging essay.” Jim Hudspeth Laboratory of Sensory Neuroscience at The Rockefeller University. “Wow! I am very impressed by both the range and the quality of the articles and responses that have appeared to date, several of which I have just read.” 7 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Tasneem Husain Theoretical physicist, writer and educator, based in Cambridge. “I have not yet had the opportunity of reading all the articles, but gauging from what I have read, this latest issue seems fascinating.” José M Igoa Department of Basic Psychology Department at the University of Madrid. “Thank you very much for the information about your journal and the link to David Lobina and Mark Benchley's review of Tom Wolfe's book. I have taken a look at the title of the articles you have published so far and they look pretty interesting indeed. I will voice the news about your publication to my colleagues.” Eva Jablonka Israeli theorist and geneticist. “Thank you very much for sending us the online ninth issue (very interesting and thought provoking).” Andrew Jordan Professor of physics at the University of Rochester. “I have gone through the edited version of the book review. There were a lot of changes made, but I think you managed to keep most of my ideas and condense it in the editing process. Please pass along my thanks to David and the other editors for the editing/co-writing.” Alexander Kharazishvili Chief Researcher in the Department of Mathematical Analysis at the A. Razmadze Mathematical Institute. “Thank you very much for information and good news! Definitely, I will be reading this issue of Inference with my great interest and I am sure I will enjoy it. Especially, I am proud to be among so eminent authors.” 8 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments “Many thanks for information concerning the new issue of Inference. I will be reading the material presented in it with my great interest, especially because of very eminent persons among the authors of articles of this issue.” William Kininmonth Australian retired meteorologist. “Thank you for advising of the availability of the fifth issue of Inference. It has splendid articles and may the publication prosper.” Matthew Kleban Associate Professor of Physics and Director of the Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics at New York University. “It seems to me that Ellis’ criticism of my response is rather dishonest. He quotes part of a paragraph, and then attacks it (“Wrong…”) on precisely the grounds that I addressed in the sentences following the part he quoted, which he ignores. Nevertheless, I’m glad to see this debate playing out in a serious publication (rather than on blogs etc).” Lawrence Krauss Foundation Professor of the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University and director of its Origins Project. “ It is a remarkable collection. I am honored to be listed as a part of it.” Martin Krieger Professor of planning at the Sol Price School of Public Policy at the University of Southern California. “Inference continues to have terrific stuff. Please tell the editors that what is being published in Inference is much better than what appears elsewhere in its areas of concern. Concrete, specific, interesting.” 9 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Pieter Lemmens Professor of philosophy and ethics at the Radboud University in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. “I wanted to thank you both once again for all your excellent support and for the outstanding way in which my review has been edited and published on the beautiful Inference website, including the caricature, which I really liked. I feel truly honored. And many thanks for the generous remuneration as well.” David LePoire Environmental analyst at the US national laboratory. “Thank you very much. Your efforts in revising and editing this paper have improved it greatly. Although I like the figure, I realize that the table is more readable.” John Leslie University Professor Emeritus, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. “I am grateful for the issues of Inference that you have sent to me, all of them very interesting. I admired its quality.” Audrey Li Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures and Linguistics. “Many thanks for bringing my attention to this excellent article. The writing is accessible and captivating. Hope you don't mind me helping to spread words about this article.” Stuart Lindsay Director of the Center for Single Molecule Biophysics in the Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University. “The many requests from “vanity” publishers swamp out the genuine article. Your publication is very interesting. I enjoyed the articles in the link, even Jim Tour’s which I think is based on silly science.” 10 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Former research scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research in Cologne, Germany. “Thank you very much for your informative mail and the print version of Inference. I liked it and I have appreciated the quality of its selection of the range of substantial topics as well as its eminent contributors.” Robert Losee Professor at the UNC School of Information and Library Science “Looking through your web site, I am impressed by Inference!” Jean-Pierre Luminet Director of Research at the CNRS Astrophysics Laboratory in Marseille and the Paris Observatory. “I am quite amazed by the extraordinary improvement of our draft due to your strong implication in Quietanus’ history. I really enjoy the new version as it is, and I thank you to have taken so quickly and efficiently the decision to publish it.” Jayadev Misra Indian computer scientist, currently the Schlumberger Centennial Chair Emeritus and Distinguished Teaching Professor Emeritus at University of Texas at Austin. “I looked over some of the back issues of your journal, and I am impressed by the quality of the publications (and the authors). It will be a great honor to write an article, but also extremely time-consuming.” Alexander More Research Associate in Harvard department of History, Initiative for the Science of the Human Past . “I’ve read several great reviews on Inference recently.” 11 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments John Norton Distinguished Professor at Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh. “I’ve been reading the articles. Congratulations—a great issue!” “An aside, if I may: I happen to writing some teaching materials on time travel universes and quantum mechanics for my online teaching book. So it was a welcome surprise to find articles on the very topic in Vol 3 and Vol 4 of your journal. Count me as a happy reader!” Christof Paulus Visiting lecturer in the Department of History at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. “It really has become a very interesting new issue of Inference. International Review of Science. I'm happy to be part of it and I enjoy it very much.” Philip Pilkington Research analyst working in investment management and focusing on macroeconomic research. “I read some of the articles online. Very good.” CP Rajendran Indian geologist. “I just opened the link and saw a wonderful list of articles. Looking forward to reading them. Kusala's article is highly liked by some readers in India.” Kusala Rajendran Professor at the Indian Institute of Science’s Centre for Earth Sciences in Bangalore. “The piece shared with friends revieved very good comments. Lot of people would access the site now. Thanks for inviting me to do this and thanks for the great job.” 12 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Joris Roosen PhD student at Utrecht University and is affiliated to the Research Institute for History and Art History. “It was a pleasure to contribute to your journal.” Merrilee Salmon Professor Emerita at the University of Pittsburgh in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science. “I have read with great pleasure about half of the issue now, and I am delighted that my piece appears in such distinguished company.” Subir Sarkar Head of the Particule Theory Group in Oxford's Department of Physics. “I am still very interested in writing for Inference. I do think it is unique - both in its style and coverage, and in its readership who I imagine are intellectuals in the broadest sense. It should be a privilege to write for it” “I am very impressed by the depth and quality of the contributions. There are critical literary journals (e.g. the London Review of Books) but I have not come across anything like this in the sciences.” Eric Scerri Historian and philosopher of chemistry in the Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry at UCLA. “What an excellent journal!” Pierre Schapira Professor Emeritus at University Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6. “This issue seems extremely rich and interesting.” 13 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments George Scialabba Contributing editor of the online art and literary magazine The Baffler. “I look forward to reading it, as usual.” James Sharpe Professor of Early Modern History. “Again, my thanks for having been sent this, and I would like to extend my best wishes for the future of Inference.” Lawrence R. Smith Entrepreneur, former academic, and a specialist in the Inuktitut (Eskimo) language for computational linguistics research. “I appreciate your editorial work and have admired Inference since its inception.” Wolfgang Streeck Director Emeritus and Professor at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne. “Looks very good.” Ian Tattersall Paleoanthropologist, American Museum of Natural History in New York City. “Please thank your staff for a very nice production job. It has been a pleasure working with you, and I would be delighted to repeat the experience some time. Thanks again for showcasing my work. ” Mariam Thalos Professor of Philosophy at the University of Utah. “I am very gratified by your invitation, which I will be very happy to accept (and propose a topic) if you would still like me to do so after reading this email.” 14 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Vangelis Tourloukis Post-doctoral researcher in the Paleoanthropology Department of the Institute for Archaeological Sciences at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen. “I enjoy and respect Inference, and I really appreciate your invitation.” Luca Turin Biophysicist with an interest in biological electronics. “A science article I wrote for Inference is now online. I am honored to find myself in the company of people whose writing I admire, like the great critic George Scialabba and the astronomer and cosmologist Jean Pierre Luminet. And I even like the caricature.” “The article looks great, many thanks. I would be happy to write some more for your excellent magazine.” Reidun Twarock German-born mathematical biologist at the University of York. “Many thanks for the link - I have read the essays with great pleasure.” Jaya Sivaswami Tyagi Professor and Head, Department of Biotechnology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences. “I have indeed received the print version of Inference in very good condition considering its size and was impressed by the product. I have glanced through it and will definitely read the articles and give you my feedback in due course of time.” Richard Wagner Holbert L. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University. “Thanks for sending along the new issue of Inference. Your journal has established a wonderful editorial policy of presenting deeply thoughtful examinations of a broad range of scholarly topics. Not only do I plan to keep up with Inference going forward, but also I will convey my enthusiasm for your journal to those colleagues of mine who I think will be interested.” 15 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Swede White Wolfram Research. “The journal's content is quite interesting, and this sounds like a wonderful opportunity.” William A. Wilson Entrepreneur and artificial intelligence researcher. “I hadn't previously heard of your magazine, but when I clicked over to your website my eye was immediately caught by Gregory Chaitin's article, as he is one of my favorite mathematicians. I also read with great pleasure "Categories: From Zero to Infinity" by Pierre Schapira, which did an excellent job of communicating a highly technical subject. I'm now looking forward to perusing the rest of the site when I have time!” Natalie Wolchover Award-winning science writer, she has covered the physics beat on staff at Quanta Magazine since the magazine's launch in 2013. “Thank you very much for the invitation to write for your excellent journal. I have read many wonderful essays in Inference, and would be honored to contribute, if only I had the time and energy to do so. I hope we can stay in touch and perhaps revisit the possibility of my writing for you at a future time. I especially appreciate how long and technical, but still crystal clear, your articles tend to be, permitting great depth and thoroughness. Congratulations to you and your team.” 16 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments French authors Aurélien Barrau Astrophysicist specializing in general relativity and cosmology. He is a professor at the Université Grenoble-Alpes. “Ca semble très intéressant, merci ! ” Jean-Paul Delahaye Mathematician, professor emeritus in computer science at the University of Lille. “Ce fut un plaisir de travailler avec vous et j'espère que nous aurons d'autres occasions de le faire.” Gilles Dryancour Honorary Chairman of the Public Policy Group of CEMA, a European trade association. “Un grand merci pour l’information et la publication. C’est un plaisir d’être publié dans votre revue. ” Jean-Pierre Dupuy Professor Emeritus of Social and Political Philosophy at the École Polytechnique in Paris and Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. “ Merci beaucoup! Ce numéro se présente excellemment, et je suis fier d'être en aussi bonne compagnie. ” Djillali Hadjouis Paleoanthropologist and associate researcher at the CNRS. “Les traducteurs ont fait un excellent travail. Je vous remercie de votre envoi. Comme d’habitude, ce nouveau numéro livre d’intéressantes contributions. ” 17 Inference: International Review of Science Feedback & Comments Henri Lepage Economist well-known for Demain le capitalisme (Tomorrow, Capitalism) and Demain le libéralisme (Tomorrow, Liberalism). “En tous les cas, bravo pour cette initiative. ” René Lozi Mathematician in the Laboratoire Jean-Alexandre Dieudonné at the Université de Nice Sophia- Antipolis. “Je vous remercie très vivement, ainsi que par vous l'équipe éditoriale d'Inference, d'avoir accepté ma lettre. J'ai été très intéressé de découvrir votre revue. Je suis également très honoré d'être publié en compagnie de mathématiciens célèbres. ” From Twitter “Thoughtful, thorough, wide-ranging, and well written analyses. A rare find amidst a surfeit of shallowness.” “As a general and very ordinary reader, I just wanted to thank you for making available such damned interesting stuff.” -- C. Van Wert 18
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