Two points on this topic:
1. I am aware of a number of cases where a journal has rejected a paper, the author makes a few MINOR changes, submits the revised article to a different journal, and it is accepted. Thus there is no ABSOLUTE standard of quality in research.
2. I once discussed the issue of the quality of papers in the scientific literature with nobel prize winner Gerhard Herzberg and he said that there are two types of paper out there:
(i) Papers that provide data that will serve as quality reference data and as such will essentially always be of value, and
(ii) Papers that provide questionable data that will ultimately prove to be of little value or entirely erroneous.
In fact Herzberg believed that this IS THE PURPOSE of research literature: to separate the good from the bad!
Thus Herzberg argued that you shouldn't worry too much about the quality of a particular paper because research is self-correcting... good research is ultimatly recognized for what it is, as is bad.
1. I am aware of a number of cases where a journal has rejected a paper, the author makes a few MINOR changes, submits the revised article to a different journal, and it is accepted. Thus there is no ABSOLUTE standard of quality in research.
2. I once discussed the issue of the quality of papers in the scientific literature with nobel prize winner Gerhard Herzberg and he said that there are two types of paper out there:
(i) Papers that provide data that will serve as quality reference data and as such will essentially always be of value, and
(ii) Papers that provide questionable data that will ultimately prove to be of little value or entirely erroneous.
In fact Herzberg believed that this IS THE PURPOSE of research literature: to separate the good from the bad!
Thus Herzberg argued that you shouldn't worry too much about the quality of a particular paper because research is self-correcting... good research is ultimatly recognized for what it is, as is bad.