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A 160-YEAR TRADITIONSince 1857, The Atlantic has been challenging assumptions and pursuing  WHO WE AREAs we reflect on our past and look toward the future—in a world where ideologically narrow or simple answers are less adequate, and can even be more destructive, than ever—we decided to put to words a handful of ideas we thought represented authentic guiding commitments for us and to our Look for the truth above looking for a We know great storytelling is part of great But honest reporting and analysis, and the integrity they represent, are what matter most to us, even if their pursuit requires giving up on an alluring Continue to explore rather than imagining we’ve Certainty can be comforting, but it can also get in the way of For us, the end of every story or argument should be the beginning of a conversation, and the end of every conversation the beginning of another—or even another story or Go beyond what happens to what We see it as part of our job to help keep our audience up-to-date on the most important news and current events across the United States and around the But the bigger part of our job is to work out—through reporting, argument, and debate—what that news means now, and what it could mean for the Embrace a diversity of No story is ever complete, no argument is ever perfect, and debates worth having tend to shift and turn more than they So we can never rely on a single point of view, or even on a “balance” of Important ideas, observations, points, and counterpoints can come from anywhere—from across the political spectrum—so we have to look everywhere for Immerse ourselves, and our audience, in the world—instead of escaping from People are connected today in ways they’ve never been before, through established media, new media, social media, or But these kinds of connection have also balkanized, filtered, alienated, and inspired retreat—into private concerns, into entertainment, into ideological comfort zones, and so We want to connect with the world by fully engaging with it, and with people who see it differently from how others see Our hope is that these commitments orient us in a way that not only is genuine for The Atlantic, but that helps us be as meaningful as possible to you in your life, and as good a force as possible for the world around WHERE WE COME FROMWhen the founders of The Atlantic gathered in Boston in the spring of 1857, they wanted to create a magazine that would be indispensable for the kind of reader who was deeply engaged with the most consequential issues of the The men and women who created this magazine had an overarching, prophetic vision—they were fierce opponents of slavery—but they were also moved to overcome what they saw as the limits of partisanship, believing that the free exchange of ideas across ideological lines was crucial to the great American Their goal was to publish the most urgent essays, the most vital literature; they wanted to pursue truth and disrupt consensus without regard for party or  Here is the mission statement published in the very first issue of The Atlantic, in November 1857, and signed by many of the greats of American letters, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Herman Melville, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne:First: In Literature, to leave no province unrepresented, so that while each number will contain articles of an abstract and permanent value, it will also be found that the healthy appetite of the mind for entertainment in its various forms of Narrative, Wit, and Humor, will not go uncared The publishers wish to say, also, that while native writers will receive the most solid encouragement, and will be mainly relied on to fill the pages of The Atlantic, they will not hesitate to draw from the foreign sources at their command, as occasion may require, relying rather on the competency of an author to treat a particular subject, than on any other claim In this way they hope to make their Periodical welcome wherever the English tongue is spoken or Second: In the term Art they intend to include the whole domain of aesthetics, and hope gradually to make this critical department a true and fearless representative of Art, in all its various branches, without any regard to prejudice, whether personal or national, or to private considerations of what kind Third: In Politics, The Atlantic will be the organ of no party or clique, but will honestly endeavor to be the exponent of what its conductors believe to be the American It will deal frankly with persons and with parties, endeavoring always to keep in view that moral element which transcends all persons and parties, and which alone makes the basis of a true and lasting national It will not rank itself with any sect of anties, but with that body of men which is in favor of Freedom, National Progress, and Honor, whether public or In studying this original mission statement, we came to understand that its themes are The core principles of the founders are core principles for us: reason should always guide opinion; ideas have consequences, sometimes world-historical consequences; the knowledge we have about the world is partial and provisional, and subject to analysis, scrutiny, and MILESTONESFEBRUARY 1862Julia Ward Howe’s “Battle Hymn of the Republic” makes its first public appearance, on the front page of The AAPRIL 1862Ralph Waldo Emerson, in “American Civilization,” calls for the emancipation of slaves, and praises President Abraham Lincoln for his principled moves in that APRIL 1870Anna Harriette Leonowens publishes “English Governess at the Siamese Court,” her memoir of her time in Siam, which is later fictionalized by Margaret Landon as Anna and the King of Siam—and, in 1951, turned into the hit musical The King and IAUGUST 1897W E B Du Bois, in “The Strivings of the Negro People,” introduces his idea of the African American's experience of “double consciousness,” setting in motion a conversation on race and identity that continues AUGUST 1897In the same issue, John Muir argues passionately, in “The American Forests,”  for the central role federal government must play in the preservation of nature, later inspiring President Theodore Roosevelt to establish the National Park SAUGUST 1915The magazine publishes “The Road Not Taken,” which Robert Frost had given to then-editor Ellery Sedgwick as a handwritten AUGUST 1932Far ahead of her time, Helen Keller, in the form of humorous Depression-era business advice-giving, encourages more men to do housework in “Put Your Husband in the K”JULY 1945In “As We May Think,” Vannevar Bush writes one of the most influential think pieces in modern technological history, offering the first vision of what would decades later become hypertext—a building block of email and the World Wide WAPRIL 1963The Atlantic publishes Martin Luther King J’s “Letter From Birmingham Jail,” then titled “The Negro Is Your Brother,” for the first time nationally, a document that would serve as one of the defining texts of the civil-rights MARCH 1982James Q Wilson and George L Kelling publish “Broken Windows,” which would go on to—for better and for worse, some might argue—define the next three decades of criminology, and continues to remain influential, and hotly debated, SEPTEMBER 1990Bernard Lewis writes his hallmark essay, “The Roots of Muslim Rage,” presaging the rise of Islamic NOVEMBER 2002With uncanny prescience, and against the tide of much popular opinion, James Fallows projects, in “The Fifty-First State?”—published six months before the start of the Iraq War—that “the day after a war ended, Iraq would become America’s ”JULY/AUGUST 2013Anne-Marie Slaughter reframes the gender-and-work debate with “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All,” arguing that true equality entails sweeping policy JUNE 2014In “The Case for Reparations,” Ta-Nehisi Coates argues that America must “reckon” with its “compounding moral debts,” sparking international debate on how governments and citizens should confront systemic injustice, both past and MARCH 2015Graeme Wood, in “What ISIS Really Wants,” offers a sweeping, in-depth analysis of the terrorist organization’s motivations and worldview, and his arguments find their way into both the White House and popular
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发表高质量的SCI论文是每个科研者的梦想,从高的层面上来讲,这代表着这个作者的学术水平;从现实的层面上来讲,好的SCi文章能够帮助学者迅速得到职称上的晋升,从而极大的改善待遇。所以追逐SCI文章已经成为单位发展的趋势,按照东北人讲话:必须的。越提早下手准备SCI,越能够为你的事业带来帮助和飞跃。很多医生在自己的文章被接收以后,会面临版面费的问题,版面费的数额从200美元到3000美元不等,这就给不少作者带来了很大的困惑和误解:1. 很多作者认为,交版面费的杂志不是好杂志,主要是钱的,交钱就发;2. 不理解为什么有的杂志不用交版面费,有的却要交,即使是两个影响因子基本一致的杂志: 比如美国肾病杂志和欧洲肾病杂志,两个影响因子都为5分左右,美国肾病杂志要收取约1200美元的版面费。这是为什么呢?一般来讲,除了个别的杂志,有收取高昂的版面费,钱的嫌疑外,绝大多数的收费期刊还是有不错的学术口碑的。很多杂志收取版面费,是为了让这您的这篇文章转为“open access”,即可供全世界所有的科研人员免费下载,很多不收取版面费的杂志也会提供”open access”的option,如果作者原意交纳不菲的美元后,您的文章也可以变成免费下载的,等同于非强制性的缴纳版面费。我们在查阅文献的时候经常会遇到有些文章可以免费下载下来,而有些就必须支付20-50美元不等的费用才可以下载,或者通过大学的数据库来下载,要知道这些大学每年花费数百万来购买这些数据库,像Elsevier, springer等数据库,都是非常昂贵的,你投稿这些数据库下面的杂志,是不收取版面费的,但是别人如果想看看你的研究成果,对不起,请付钱,现在这些杂志也都隶属于出版公司,公司是必须要盈利的,所以,他们通过出卖你的论文来赢得高额利润,虽然免了版面费,但是他们挣得更多。与之相反,我们也会在pubmed上下载到很多免费的好文章,而这些文章,之所以我们普通的研究人员也能够看到的原因,最主要的就是发表这篇论文的作者已经缴纳了版面费。杂志社在收到作者的版面费后,将作者的研究成果公开,这是一件很了不起的事情,相比于微薄的版面费,杂志放弃了赚取高额下载费的机会,也算是一种高尚的表现,这为许多无法负担高额购买数据库的贫穷的发展中国家的科研工作者提供了一个非常好的机会,来了解世界上发达国家科研的发展情况。杂志社也得生存,不可能出现那种什么都免费的杂志,编辑的工资也得发啊。其实交不交版面费不代表这个杂志的水平,JBC不错吧还是很多生命科学研究者的梦想杂志,也需要100美元一版,而且彩图费300美元另算。

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KP-bangbangbang

The Atlantic Monthly (also known as The Atlantic) is an American literary/cultural magazine founded in Boston in Originally a monthly publication, the magazine, subscribed to by 480,000 readers, now publishes ten times a year and features articles in the fields of political science and foreign affairs, as well as book 《大西洋月刊》(AKA《大西洋》),1857年创刊于美国马萨诸塞州的波士顿,是一本以文学及文化评论为主的杂志。创刊之初,该杂志以月刊形式发行,订阅读者人数达到了48万。如今,该刊每年发行十次,文章主要涉及政治、外交和书评等领域。

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世唯装饰

目前还没有哪个app可以看,可以在网址上搜索:经济学人(The Economist)杂志 PDF MOBI KINDLE,有很多的分类。周刊类:1)经济学人(The Economist)2)时代周刊(Time)3)纽约客(The New Yorker)4)新闻周刊(Newsweek)5)自然(Nature)6)科学(Science)7)彭博商业周刊(Bloomberg Businessweek)8)新科学家(New Scientist)9)巴伦周刊(Barron's)10)纽约时报书评(The New York Times Review of Books)此外:日报类:1)纽约时报(The New York Times)2)华尔街日报(The Wall Street Journal)3)金融时报(Financial Times)4)华盛顿邮报(The Washington Post)5)卫报(The Guardian)6)今日美国(USA Today)7)中国日报(China Daily)8)法国世界报(Le Monde)9)国际纽约时报(International New York Times)10)洛杉矶时报(Los Angeles Times)半月刊&月刊&双月刊类:1)美国国家地理(National Geographic)2)国家地理旅行者(National Geographic Traveler)3)哈佛商业评论(Harvard Business Review)4)读者文摘(Reader's Digest)5)大西洋月刊(The Atlantic)6)外交事务(Foreign Affairs)7)外交政策(Foreign Policy)8)BBC历史(BBC History)9)BBC聚焦(BBC Focus)10)财富(Fortune)

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