Fyfe Aileen
Notes Rec R Soc Lond. 2015 Sep 20;69(3):277-99. doi: 10.1098/rsnr.2015.0032.
This paper investigates the finances of the Royal Society and its Philosophical Transactions, showing that in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries journal publishing was a drain on funds rather than a source of income. Even without any expectation of profit, the costs of producing Transactions nevertheless had to be covered, and the way in which this was done reflected the changing financial situation of the Society. An examination of the Society's financial accounts and minute books reveals the tensions between the Society's desire to promote the widespread communication of natural knowledge, and the ever-increasing cost of doing so, particularly by the late nineteenth century.
本文研究了皇家学会及其《哲学汇刊》的财务状况,表明在18世纪末和19世纪,期刊出版是资金的消耗而非收入来源。即使没有盈利预期,《汇刊》的生产成本仍需覆盖,而实现这一点的方式反映了学会不断变化的财务状况。对学会财务账目和会议记录的审查揭示了学会在促进自然知识广泛传播的愿望与这样做的成本不断增加之间的紧张关系,尤其是在19世纪后期。