Peer Review Before the Guillotine: Letters, Prestige, and the Rise of the Bureaucratic Void
Reclaiming the Dialogue
Peer Review Before the Guillotine: Letters, Prestige, and the Rise of the Bureaucratic Void
There was a time when peer review did not wear the mask of authority. It was not institutionalised. It was not anonymised. It was not procedural. It was a conversation. A dialogue. Sometimes warm, often ruthless, but always human. The modern academic might not even recognise its ancestral form—when papers were letters, when editors were intellectuals rather than compliance officers, and when the function of a scientific journal was not to sort wheat from chaff via checklists, but to host ideas that risked being wrong because they dared to be right.
Think of Annalen der Physik, or the Philosophical Transactions. They were not gatekeepers of consensus. They were salons of the radical. You did not submit a manuscript to be mangled by three anonymous strangers trained to detect heresy by smell. You sent a letter. You addressed it to someone. It bore your name. The editor might know you personally. You were not playing a game of optics. You were placing your thought, unadorned, into the intellectual bloodstream of your field.
This is how Planck received Einstein’s paper in 1905—not through a fortress of statistical significance thresholds, but through correspondence. It is how Boltzmann debated, refuted, and changed minds. It is how Darwin circulated his ideas, long before The Origin hardened into canonical text. Even Newton, notoriously egotistical and defensive, understood that publishing a tract meant showing yourself. The names on the front mattered because responsibility mattered. The argument was exposed. There was no hiding behind “Reviewer 2.”
There were no impact factors. No citation indices. No style sheets demanding APA 7th edition in Helvetica 12-point font. There were letters. Thought in raw form. Sometimes handwritten. Sometimes typeset by a local printer. The criteria for publication was not its alignment with current discourse, but whether it said something of substance—whether it added. Editors did not ask if your references were recent. They asked whether your paper deserved to live. And that judgment, imperfect as it was, was made by people with names, faces, and stakes.
These journals were not perfect. They excluded. They were subject to bias. But they were real. They were messy, unpredictable, alive. They were platforms for intellectual confrontation, not bureaucratic arbitration.
Now, contrast this with the machine we have built. Peer review today is a mechanised triage system. Your paper is uploaded to a journal website run by a publishing conglomerate. It is anonymised. It is routed to three referees, themselves overworked, undercredited, and frequently uninterested. The first reads the abstract. The second glances at the figures. The third recommends rejection because your literature review missed a minor paper published in 2020 in a journal no one reads. The editor, terrified of a misstep, sides with Reviewer 2. You receive an email thanking you for your “important contribution,” but ultimately recommending “major revisions.” These include: more citations, softened language, greater alignment with prevailing frameworks, and—always—deference.
You do not revise to improve. You revise to conform.
Where once peer review was a process of mutual sharpening, it is now an audit. A checklist. A liturgical act in the church of the respectable. It is no longer about being right or being insightful. It is about being acceptable. The only thing worse than being wrong in today’s system is being right too early, or worse still, being right alone.
Today, the review process trains scholars not to speak, but to signal. Not to think, but to repackage. The manuscript must be coded in language recognisable to the clerisy. The structure must follow template. The scope must avoid controversy. The conclusions must be tentative, the metaphors sterilised, the references recent. The reviewer is not your peer. They are your handler.
The journals, once sites of risk, are now fortresses of consensus. They do not publish the untested, the dangerous, the hard to classify. They publish what will not embarrass them. They publish what has already been digested by the machine, cleaned, deodorised, and made palatable for polite consumption. Where once a single paper could upend a field, today papers are expected to “extend the literature” by a carefully calculated increment. You will not be published for thinking. You will be published for mimicking the shape of thought without its peril.
The system does not elevate voices. It filters them. It selects for patience, obedience, and fluency in bureaucratic dialect. The radicals are filtered out not by argument, but by attrition. And if you somehow publish your fire? It is buried in a paywalled journal that no one reads unless they are searching for references to pad their next grant application.
This is what we have built. Not a republic of letters, but a gated community of academic branding. Not a peer review, but a peer deflection. The names are still there—Einstein, Darwin, Newton—but their ghosts are not. They would not survive here. They would be desk-rejected for lack of methodological clarity and insufficient engagement with recent literature.
What could peer review be, if it were reborn? A correspondence again. A dialogue. A confrontation between signed minds, not rubber-stamped templates. It could be transparent, rapid, even adversarial. It could dare to let error breathe, because error is not the enemy—timidity is. It could reward the bold, the early, the awkward. It could reject the obsession with polish and embrace the mess of real thought. But this would require the courage to abandon the illusion of objectivity. The courage to stop pretending that metrics are justice. The courage, in short, to think again.Subscribe
Until then, we remain in the mausoleum. Signing our names on documents stripped of voice, filing our insights through systems designed to ensure that no one risks too much, says too much, means too much. We call it peer review. But what it reviews is not our peers. What it filters is not our errors. What it protects is the machine itself.
From Correspondence to Compliance: The Historical Collapse of Peer Review
The phrase “peer review” today evokes a series of automated emails, a blind gauntlet of bureaucratic mediation, and a style of intellectual castration masquerading as quality control. But that is a modern perversion. Once, long before the corporatised editorial boards, before the plagiarism-detection software and the editorial management systems, peer review was neither blind nor bureaucratic—it was peer and it was review. The clue, if we had any linguistic memory, is in the name.
Historically, scientific publication was correspondence. It was a letter, written in your own voice, sent to someone you knew, or at least respected, and published under your name. You did not hide behind anonymity; you stood beside your idea. If it was foolish, your peers would let you know. If it was profound, it would be discussed in cafés, salons, or universities across Europe before the ink was dry. The review, when it occurred, was not from a hidden bureaucrat tasked with filtering content for conformity. It was from another thinker, writing back. Sometimes directly. Sometimes in public.
Take Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, established in 1665. Its earliest contributors included the likes of Newton, Boyle, and Hooke—not submitting papers in the modern sense, but dispatching letters, often dense with mathematics, or filled with raw empirical observations, or stuffed with strange and daring hypotheses. There was no “submission portal.” No formatting template. The journal was a curated public exchange of letters, of communications between minds who understood that the point was not to sound correct but to risk being wrong in public.
And yes, Annalen der Physik, the journal that published Einstein’s miraculous year of 1905—papers on the photoelectric effect, Brownian motion, special relativity. These were not sent into a faceless system. They were addressed to Max Planck. To Wilhelm Wien. Men who knew how to read with both severity and curiosity. Einstein's submissions were not ‘peer reviewed’ in the modern sense. They were read, discussed, debated, published. That was the peer review. Because what mattered was the idea, not the metric. If the argument stood, it stood. And if it fell, it fell in full view of the community.
There were no anonymous reviewers asking for “clarifications” that meant “please delete the difficult parts.” There were no desk rejections for “lack of literature engagement.” There were responses. Rebuttals. Criticisms written out, signed, and sent back. The review was visible. And it could be responded to. This was not a process hidden in the folds of bureaucracy—it was a living conversation among intellectual equals, each assuming the other was capable of argument rather than in need of ideological training.
In this sense, the modern notion of the pre-print is far closer to the historical norm than the contemporary “peer-reviewed article.” When you uploaded a paper to arXiv in 1993, you were doing what Newton and Leibniz did in 1693: you were saying, here is what I’m thinking—fight me. It was a call to arms, not an application for approval.
What has replaced this is grotesque. Today’s journals are no longer platforms for exchange. They are filters, gatekeepers, brands. They exist to confer legitimacy through exclusion. Submission is not addressed to peers. It is submitted to a faceless editorial system, where your paper is anonymised, redacted of context, and handed over to reviewers selected not for their intellectual compatibility but for their proximity to the topic. And these reviewers are often exhausted, overworked, under-credited, and incentivised to play safe. So they delay. They reject. They recommend additional citations, more cautious phrasing, better alignment with “current trends.”
The entire system now functions like a permitting office. Peer review has become peer processing. You do not submit an idea. You submit a form. And the goal is not dialogue but compliance.
This is not how physics was done. This is not how economics was done. This is not how philosophy or mathematics or biology moved forward. The correspondence model was not perfect—but it was human, fast, brutal, and honest. You submitted your work, and your peers—actual peers—told you if it was interesting, idiotic, or revolutionary. And the best ideas survived not because they were polished into submission, but because they could take a hit and still stand.
Peer review once meant exposure. Now it means protection. Once it meant being seen. Now it means being masked, evaluated, scrubbed for irregularities. It is the difference between a duel and a TSA pat-down. One demands honour. The other demands you remove your belt and wait for clearance.
The pre-print archive, ironically, now offers more fidelity to the original spirit of scholarship than almost any formal journal. It returns agency to the writer. It invites criticism. It says: this is what I’ve written. Make of it what you will. But the academy still treats pre-prints as the waiting room of legitimacy, as though real thought only begins once the proper channels have stamped your work with approvable insignia.
And so we move further and further from the tradition that birthed every meaningful advance we still rely upon. We move from discourse to decorum. From letter to checklist. From fire to formatting. Peer review, once a handshake or a slap across the face, has become a checklist for the intellectually neutered.
It is not the system that produced Einstein. It is the system that would have desk-rejected him. Too bold. Too short. Not enough citations. Not sufficiently engaged with current frameworks.
And so we write not to provoke thought but to pass inspection. What was peer review is gone. What is peer review is something else entirely. And what could be again—real dialogue, real exposure, real intellectual risk—will remain outside the gates until someone has the courage to throw their letters over the wall.
Reclaiming the Dialogue: How SSRN, arXiv, and Preprints Revive the Spirit of Peer Review
Peer review, as it exists in the modern academic-industrial complex, is not a natural evolution of scientific or scholarly conversation—it is a bureaucratic mutation. The anonymous, impersonal, glacial machinery of contemporary journal review has drifted so far from its historical origins that it has become a parody of what it once was. Ironically, in an age of technological ease and instantaneous communication, real peer review—the act of submitting work to the judgement of equals in open, public intellectual exchange—has been reborn not through the institutional gatekeepers of journals, but through platforms once considered grey literature: SSRN, arXiv, and their kin. These repositories, derided by the orthodox as preliminary and “non-peer-reviewed,” are in fact the closest thing we now have to the historical practice of genuine scholarly engagement.
To understand why, we must begin with the truth that modern academic journals have almost nothing in common with their forebears. In the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries, journals were often repositories of correspondence. They were edited by individuals—often intellectuals, sometimes polymaths—who made subjective but often sharp decisions about what merited inclusion. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society began as a curated assemblage of letters and observations, edited first by Henry Oldenburg, who corresponded with scientists across Europe. There was no anonymous triage, no methodological bureaucracy. If someone had an idea—a proof, a chemical process, a celestial observation—they wrote it up, usually as a letter, and sent it to someone who could disseminate it to others of comparable intellectual standing. There were arguments, rebuttals, counter-rebuttals, often published in the same venue. What mattered was not polish, formatting, or compliance with structural orthodoxy, but contribution.
This remained largely the norm through the early twentieth century. Einstein's 1905 papers, including Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper (On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies), were not subjected to anonymous peer review in the modern sense. They were submitted directly to Annalen der Physik and reviewed editorially—read, discussed, accepted. The evaluation was intellectual, not procedural. Even in the Anglo-American world, many landmark papers in physics, mathematics, and philosophy were published through personal networks, evaluated by correspondence, or debated in public before appearing in print.
Today, the submission process for academic journals has inverted that legacy. What once was a forum has become a fortress. Authors submit not ideas but applications—through portals designed to strip their identity, silence their voice, and feed their work into the judgment of unknown assessors with little accountability and even less engagement. The result is a filtering mechanism, not a conversation. The question is not, “Is this worth arguing with?” but, “Has this ticked the boxes of formal compliance and recent citation hygiene?” Real review, real engagement, often comes only after publication—if at all.
Enter arXiv and SSRN.
These platforms, often relegated to the margins by journalists and university administrators who think only “peer-reviewed” content is legitimate, are in fact a quiet and powerful return to an older, more honest form of intellectual life. They allow scholars to post their work immediately, without waiting months or years for it to be passed through committees of risk-averse reviewers. And crucially, they allow other scholars to read, critique, respond, cite, and build upon that work in public view.
This is not “non-peer-reviewed.” This is peer review—as it was always meant to be.
When a researcher uploads a paper to arXiv, they are not hiding. They are saying: Here it is. Read it. Challenge it. Improve it. Ignore it if you wish, but I will not wait for permission to think. The very visibility of preprints fosters the possibility of engagement that is actual, not bureaucratic. Comments, blog responses, informal notes, social media threads, citation before formal publication—this is the real conversation that used to take place in salons, letters, and printed rejoinders. When a working paper is posted to SSRN, it often receives more attention—genuine scholarly attention—than it would through a traditional journal, where it might languish for eighteen months before emerging neutered, narrowed, and obscured behind a paywall.
The critics of preprints call them “unvetted.” But vetting is no guarantee of truth. Lancet has published fraud. Nature has published junk. The imprimatur of a top journal is not a substitute for real peer engagement. What matters is whether a paper is read, questioned, cited, and—most of all—understood. And this is far more likely to happen when it is made available openly, immediately, without delay or obfuscation.
Preprint culture is not perfect. It can be abused. It can be noisy. But it embodies the essential virtues that the modern academic machine has forgotten: immediacy, courage, accountability, and openness. It allows the young scholar to enter the discourse without waiting for a gatekeeper to nod. It allows dissenting voices to publish what would be unpublishable under journal regimes that prize orthodoxy. It allows for the rapid evolution of fields like theoretical physics and machine learning, where dialogue must be fast or be meaningless. It even begins to restore a sense of public scholarship, where ideas are not buried behind paywalls and credentialist barriers, but made available to all who can read and think.
In essence, SSRN, arXiv, and their analogues have reanimated the corpse of peer review. They have reconnected it to its original lifeblood—open debate among visible minds. They are not pre-publication. They are publication. The real kind. The kind that exposes the thinker to the world. The kind that asks for judgment in daylight, not behind a curtain.
And if journals were honest, they would admit that they now function less as forums of truth than as credentialing mills. They are where thought goes to be processed, not where it is born. The real birth—the real fire—happens elsewhere now. On the preprint servers. In public. Where no one is there to stop you. Where your peers read your words and decide, for themselves, whether you are worth the ink. Where the old ghosts of Newton and Planck might, if they were alive, still recognise the form and the courage behind it.
So let the journals keep their embargoes and indexes and style guides. Let them bury the bold and publish the polished. Let them cling to their antiquated rituals. The thinkers will go elsewhere. The ideas already have. The fire, once extinguished in marble halls, has found its way back into the open air. And it burns.
Toward a Living Scholarly Infrastructure: What We Need Is Not Journals, But Dialogue
The crisis in modern scholarship is not merely one of access, or of speed, or of institutional capture. It is a structural crisis in how thought is shared, challenged, and evolved. We do not suffer from a lack of publication; we suffer from a surfeit of sterile publishing. Articles are printed, indexed, and embalmed in PDF—sealed off, inert, final. What we need—urgently, fundamentally—is not another journal, nor another impact metric. What we need is a system that thinks. That evolves. That listens and replies. We need a living, open, recursive platform for scholarly dialogue. We need something like arXiv—but with memory, with response, with traceable dialectic. A dynamic system where the paper does not end with publication, but begins.
Imagine a platform where a scholar uploads a preprint—not as a gesture toward later publication, but as the first move in an intellectual exchange. The paper is made public immediately, yes. But alongside it, a space opens for comments—not anonymous, not bureaucratically policed, but thoughtful and signed. Responses may range from clarifying questions to full counterarguments, additional proofs, replications, or methodological challenges. These responses are not ephemeral. They are linked directly to the original work, visible as part of the same scholarly tree. A reader can move from the central thesis to its critics, to refinements, to supporting data, and back again—all in one place.
This is not a comments section. This is a layered map of intellectual engagement.
The original author may revise—not in secret, but visibly. Each version retained. Each change tracked. Each new draft a continuation of the scholarly conversation. This would not be “pre-publication peer review.” This is peer review—reclaimed, made transparent, turned into a discursive web rather than a gatekeeping checkpoint. The paper does not disappear into the editorial abyss. It lives. It evolves. It remembers.
Think of what this would allow.
No more waiting a year to publish a five-page critique that no one will see. No more burying methodological concerns in private reviewer correspondence. No more performative “engagement with the literature” that simply lists recent publications like trophies on a mantel. Instead: link your paper to the ideas that challenge it. Draw a direct line from your argument to the minds it has provoked. Let citation become not flattery but encounter.
This is what the best of arXiv gestures toward. It provides immediacy. It provides access. But it remains, structurally, a one-way street. A PDF is uploaded. Others may read it. Some may cite it. But the conversation happens elsewhere—on blogs, in closed peer review, in institutional corridors. The work is fixed. Frozen. What we need is a networked publication model, a platform of continuity, not stasis. Something that honours the fact that thought is not a product, but a process.
And yes, such a system must resist the institutional pressure to formalise everything into metrics. It must resist the urge to score, to rank, to audit. It must instead provide infrastructure for argument. A digital agora. A structure of visibility, not prestige. Where anyone may speak, and the audience determines what echoes.
The closest analogues today—OpenReview, parts of PubPub, certain layers of hypothesis-based web annotation—are beginnings, not ends. They are gestures in the right direction. But what we lack is the full commitment. The systemic replacement. The resolve to say that the journal, as we know it, has failed as a venue of thought. It has become a ledger, not a dialogue.
So build the next arXiv. But make it porous. Make it recursive. Make it daring. Let scholars post not just papers but challenges, alternative interpretations, suggested applications. Let each paper be a locus—not a tombstone. Let every version be preserved, every citation traceable, every argument answerable.
This is not an idealistic dream. It is a practical necessity. It is how science once worked—through letters, through exchanges, through direct challenge and bold reply. It is how it must work again if we are to think with any seriousness. Because truth is not found in formatted PDFs sitting inert behind a paywall. It is forged in conflict, refined in response, and remembered by its scars.
We do not need another journal.
We need the machine of thought rebuilt from the ground up.
Connected.
Commentable.
Continuous.
Alive.