Of course, there is no difference—there is no physical quality inherent in a piece of art that makes it a piece of art, rather than any old artifact. But that’s true also for classical representational art: somebody not steeped in the context needed to ground the references—some alien being wholly different from humanity, say—will be as mystified by the Mona Lisa as one might be by a Rothko. It’s just that this context was much more widespread with ‘classical’ pieces of art, enough so that we could pretend it was universal, if we don’t look too far beyond the edge of our plate.
In truth, what’s art and what’s not always was a social judgment, and the attempt to judge that judgment just produces meaningless results, since there’s no independent layer of reality to judge it against.
Context. A urinal is not art, but placed in the proper context, it is, precisely becaue it does not conform to preconceived notions of ‘artiness’, and thus, makes you question them. But otherwise, atom by atom, it is not different from any other urinal.
You misrepresent the situation. I said that highly cited papers are no better than the uncited ones. You said that I said that there is no difference between good and bad papers. From this follows that for you good papers are equivalent to highly cited.
From your comments it is evident that you lack elementary logic. Besides you proclaim degenerate art to be great. So it indeed could be just like that.
What do your facilities allow you to accomplish besides producing peer-reviewed research?
Not really wanting to get into a game of he-said-she-said, but I said that there is a difference between good and bad papers, and that thus, we can tell that the highly cited papers are typically better than uncited ones; hence, your model is inappropriate, as it fails to account for this fact. Alternatively, there’s no difference between good research and bad research, and I—and the rest of the scientific establishment—am just deluding myself. But then of course one couldn’t tell whether the research on your model is good or bad, so that’s that.
Here is statistical analysis of the reader ratings of Dickens’s and Bulwer’s book. People read complete books, not just fragments. Results, nevertheless, are very similar