Submissions
Submission Preparation Checklist
As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.- The text complies with the bibliographic and style requirements indicated in the Author Guidelines, which can be found in this section.
- The article submitted is original, is entirely the work of its author(s), has not been previously published, has not been submitted to another journal (or an explanation has been provided in comments to the editor), and a list of all sources and references used in its writing is provided.
- If you are submitting the article to a peer-reviewed section of the journal, the file must be completely anonymized, with no reference to the author's name, personal details, institutional affiliation or any other information that reveals the author's identity (as well as any reference in the properties of the file).
- If images are used in the article, the author must have full rights to reproduce them, indicate where they should be placed in the text and provide them as separate files.
- DOIs or website have been added for references where possible.
Author Guidelines
Submission
Pre-evaluation and review
Proofreading
Liability and copyright
General style guidelines
Critical apparatus (APA)
Examples
Submission
Papers submitted to Razón y fe must be sent in electronic support, in a .docx file and they will be sent through this same web, through which communication between the journal and the authors will be established.
The work to be submitted must be original, not having been published or accepted for publication in the same or another language nor being in the process of being published or assessed by another journal. The original work must be submitted completely finished and must be adapted to the instructions given by the journal, which you will find in this section.
The metadata and the first page of the articles must include:
- Title of the article in the original language and in English.
- An abstract (150 words maximum) in the original language of the article and in English. It must stand on its own because it is the most accessible part of your article and the part that determines interest in it. It should be synthetic and allow the readers to know the most important points of your research and reflect why it is important to your field of research. It is recommended to repeat the words of the title in the abstract so that they carry more weight in search engines. In addition, a good abstract can speed up the peer review process as reviewers only receive the abstract before accepting the review.
- A list of six or eight keywords in the original language of the article and in English. Keywords are a tool to help search engines, so they should represent the content of the article and be specific to the field of research.
The metadata of the article (fields in the web submission form) must state:
- Name and surname of ALL authors. Authors are encouraged to use their standardised signature to facilitate citation counting and retrieval of their entire output throughout their career.
- Institution (or establishment, if any), in its standardised form, without abbreviations and in the original language to avoid variants of non-approved names.
- E-mail, ORCID (full URL) and, if available, personal website. The e-mail address and ORCID will appear on the first page of the article.
In case the article has been written by several authors, all those who have made a substantial contribution to the article should be included in the submission form. It should be taken into consideration that the order of appearance will reflect the responsibility of each one in the elaboration of the research, bearing in mind that the first author will be the main author and the following authors will appear in order according to their involvement.
The journal does not impose any limit on the number of authors, as long as this number is justified by the complexity of the study. The journal will not accept subsequent amendments or add new authors.
Pre-evaluation & Peer Review
Once the manuscript has been received, a pre-assessment of the text will be carried out to analyse whether the subject of the article is of interest and appropriate to the scope of the journal and whether it meets the minimum quality requirements, as well as the formal submission specifications (see above) and style guidelines (see below).
Rejected originals will not enter the assessment process. Those originals that have aspects that can be corrected will be returned to their authors before proceeding with the review. In this case, authors should complete them and make the appropriate formal adjustments. Otherwise, these works will not continue with the review process.
Once the pre-assessment phase is completed, the formal evaluation process will being and will be sent anonymously to two external reviewers, experts in the field, who will issue an opinion based on the originality, relevance and methodological rigour of the manuscript.
This opinion shall state the grounds on which it is based, indicating whether they recommend accepting the original, a modified version or rejecting it. In some cases a third opinion may be requested, in particular where there is a significant divergence of opinion between the assessors. Ultimately, the final decision will be made by the editorial board.
By submitting the manuscript, the authors accept that it will be subject to the opinion of the reviewers and editors, adjusting the final wording of the text to the indications given by them. To this end, they shall include all amendments deemed essential and, as far as possible, shall also take account of their suggestions.
Proofreading
The journal will send authors a galley and they will have ten days to correct it. If there has been no response, it will be understood that no changes are desired.
The author/s should understand that these proofs are not sent for the article to be rewritten, but for mistakes (if any) to be corrected. Changes may affect the structure and organisation of text and may slow down the publication of the article.
Liability and copyright
The author, by submitting the manuscript, guarantees to the journal the authorship and originality of the manuscript, assuming exclusive liability for it.
The journal and its editors do not necessarily endorse the content, assessments and conclusions of the articles published. Neither shall they assume any responsibility for the consequences of the possible use by third parties of the information and criteria incorporated in these works.
Authors of articles accepted in Razón y fe preserve all intellectual property rights over their work and grant the journal the necessary distribution and public communication permissions to publish them under a licence of Creative Commons NonCommercial-NoDerivatives-Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors must be able to prove that they have the necessary permissions for the use of the photographs and graphs included in their research, bearing in mind that permission from the copyright owner is required to reproduce or adapt original tables and figures and that they must be properly cited. When a figure or table has been created by the author, it is not necessary to add the reference; it is understood that everything that is not referenced is the author's own work.
General style guidelines
It is recommended to follow the usual structure of a research paper: presentation and purpose of the work, description of the sources and methodology, presentation and discussion of the results, conclusions and list of references.
The total length of the article should be 6,000-8,000 words, including notes, graphs, tables, illustrations and bibliographical references. The length of a Review is between 1,000 and 1,500 words.
All text should be in Times New Roman. The font size for general text is 12 point, 1,5 line spacing with no space between paragraphs.
Quotations longer than 40 words should be in a smaller font size (11 point) and indented without inverted commas. The first letter of the quoted word can be changed to lower or upper case, as well as punctuation marks at the end of the sentence to match the syntax. Any other changes to the original citation should be indicated. To indicate that you have omitted words within quotation use three periods with spaces around each. Use square brackets to enclose an addition or explanation you have inserted in a quotation.
Notes, if any, should be footnotes, numbered consecutively, 10 point with single spacing. They should only be used to complement or expand on information in the text if they strengthen the argument. Avoid overusing them as they may distract the reader.
Titles and subtitles should be as short as possible and statistical or mathematical developments should be made within the text to make it easier for readers to follow the storyline.
Use of bold, italics, and inverted commas
Bold type should be avoided and used only for headings and titles of figures, graphs or tables.
Italics (in the body of the article) should only be used to emphasise words or short phrases if they are foreign words, Latin words, are part of slang, take an incorrect form or are not being used in the proper sense of the words.
The main functions of inverted commas are to express irony, to indicate to the reader that it is a vulgarism, that the author cannot find a more appropriate word or that it has connotations with which they do not identify. Inverted commas shall be used. They may also be used to reproduce verbatim an excerpt from another work of less than 40 words in length. If you are quoting text within text, double inverted commas will be used first, followed by single inverted commas.
Punctuation marks and note calls always follow the closing quotation mark. If a quotation ends with a punctuation mark, it is removed.
Use of capital letters
The use of capital letters should be minimized, adhering strictly to standard grammatical rules.
Critical apparatus (APA)
A very important part of the writing process is to contextualise the work by citing those sources that have directly influenced the research.
References to sources cited should follow the APA style, which states that parenthetical quotations should be used, inserted in the text, and a list, with the references in alphabetical order, at the end of the article. Each reference quoted in the text must appear in the final list.
Parenthetical quotations
In the text, the transcription of the ideas that we quote can basically appear in two ways: by reformulating the idea in the wording of the article (paraphrasing) or by reproducing literally the words of the author we are quoting (direct quotation).
The main elements of a parenthetical quotation are the author's surname(s) and year and, if the citation is verbatim, the page(s) on which it appears. Depending on the number of authors of the referenced work, the standard establishes the following indications.
One author
When the source we are citing has one author, the standard establishes that the author's surname, the year of publication and the page or pages should be put in brackets next to the text.
Two authors
If the source has two authors, the surnames of the two authors separated by "&" followed by the year of publication and the page or pages will appear in brackets.
Multiple authors
If the source has three or more authors, include the name of the main author plus "et al.” (in round) in each quotation, including the first, unless it creates ambiguity. In order to avoid ambiguity, write as many names as necessary to distinguish the references and abbreviate the rest.
[...] however, consider that artificial consciousness may have creative application within the arts (Bryson et al., 2017).
When several works have one or more authors with the same name(s) and the same date, enter a letter after the year. This combination is used both for in-text quotations and for the reference list.
[...] the new findings and to interpret the profound implications for our understanding or our human history (Cela-Conde & Ayala, 2017a).
Institutional author or group of authors
When the responsibility for authorship falls on an institution, organisation, research group or corporate author, the first time they appear in the text, the full name must be stated. For the following quotations we can use abbreviations or acronyms if the abbreviation is known. In the list of references, do not abbreviate the name of the group of authors.
[...] was sent to virtually every school district in America and proved quite effective in public education (National Academy of Sciences, 1984).
The concept of biological evolution is one of the most important ideas ever generated by the application of scientific methods to the natural world (NAS, 1999).
If the author's name is part of the reasoning in the writing, only the year and pages shall be included:
[...] the impossibility result in Armstrong and Mindermann (2018) is of a fundamental nature, and is not affected by the amounts of training data or how expressive the learning system is
If the quotation is based on the text, the author, year and page(s) are included at the end:
The problem of anticipating human behaviour has in fact only recently risen to the attention of the computer vision community (Felsen, 2019, p. 5), while, in contrast, it has been studied [...]
When the reproduced extract is longer than 40 words, it should be indented, in a smaller font, without quotation marks and in a separate paragraph.
One promising direction for this project is Gallese's (2017) bio-cultural approach to art and aesthetics, which is grounded in embodied cognitive processes.
The body literally stages subjectivity by means of a series of postures, feelings, expressions, and behaviors. At the same time, the body projects itself in the world and makes it its own stage where corporeality is actor and beholder; its expressive content is subjectively experienced and recognized in others. (p. 181)
If the quotation is based on the text, after a full stop, the author, year and page(s) are included at the end.
Suffering in this view implicates self-knowledge and the role of language in reflecting upon and abstracting experience.
A specific process is posited as the source of the ubiquity of human suffering: the bidirectionality of human language. Pain is unavoidable for all complex living creatures, due to the exigencies of living, but human beings enormously amplify their own pain through language. Because verbal relations are arbitrarily applicable, any situation can “remind” humans of past hurts of all kinds. In nonverbal organisms, only formally similar situations will perform this function. (Hayes, 2002, p. 62)
List of references
The list of references at the end of the article provides the necessary information to identify and retrieve each source. APA style establishes that the list only includes the references cited in the article, unlike the bibliography, which includes all the sources that have been consulted for the research. All the complete references of the works cited in the text of the article must appear, regardless of the type of source, leaving only the list, without including their classification titles, in alphabetical order and with French indentation. Any reference with a DOI number (Digital Object Identifier) shall include it at the end of the reference.
Pay special attention to this list, if the elements of the references are not complete or there are inconsistencies in the rules it may affect the extraction of citations by the databases in which the journal is indexed.
Components of the references
Each reference usually contains the following elements: author, date of publication, title and publication details (all the information necessary for the unique identification and bibliographic search of the source).
Author and editor
Reverse the order of the author's name (surname(s), first initial), the list should be sorted alphabetically by the first author's surname. If several works by the same author(s) appear, the name shall be included in both the first and the following references, even if it is repeated, and they shall be ordered by date of publication.
In the case of a co-authored work, all authors up to 20 shall be cited. If there are 20 or more, the first 19 are listed, ellipses are added and the last one is added.
If the reference does not have an author, the title followed by a full stop is placed in the author's position, before the date of publication.
If an edited book is cited, the name or names of the editor, coordinator, director, compiler or organiser should be listed in the author's place and the responsibility for the publication should be put in brackets (ed., eds., coord., coords., dir., dirs., comps., comps., or org., orgs.). The full stop is placed after the closing parenthesis.
Bryson, V., & Vogel, H. (eds.). (1966). Evolving Genes and Proteins. Academic Press.
If an entire edited book with authored chapters is referencing, the name and surname of the authors of the chapter are inverted, but not the name of the editor, which must be preceded by the preposition "In". For book chapters without a editor, simply add "In" before the book title.
Fernández, P. (2014). Reasoning and the Unity of Aristotle’s Account of Animal Motion. En B. Inwood (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy (vol. 47, pp. 151-204). Oxford University Press.
Cohen, R. A. (2001). What good is the Holocaust? On suffering and evil. In Ethics, Exegesis and Philosophy (pp. 266-282). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511488238.009
Date
Information on the date of publication is given in brackets after the author information.
If a newspaper or bulletin is being cited, the exact date of publication (month and day) is included.
Ambrosino, B. (2018, 18 de junio). What would it mean for AI to have a soul? BBC. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20180615-can-artificial-intelligence-have-a-soul-and-religion
When there is no information on the date of publication, it can be indicated by the abbreviation n.d. in brackets.
For those articles that have been accepted for publication but have not been published, the date (and probably number or volume) will not be known until they are published, so the reference [in press] should be included in square brackets instead.
Title
The title of articles and chapters of a book are written in round, while the title of books and journals are written in italics.
When the work has a subtitle, it is written after the title followed by a colon.
Gaudet, M. J., Herzfeld, N., Scherz, P., y Wales, J. J. (eds.). (2024). Encountering Artificial Intelligence: Ethical and Anthropological Investigations. Pickwick.
Source information
Add in brackets the necessary information to identify the work and do not add a full stop between the title and the brackets. Edition or volume information should be included after the title of the book. If both edition and volume information is included, separate elements by a comma, placing the edition information first.
Massaro, T. (2016). Living Justice (3rd ed.). Rowman & Littlefield.
If the work has several volumes, the title of the volume is treated as a second part of the title, in italics, including the number and separated by a colon. If the volume has no title of its own, only the number in brackets is added. Series or collection information is not included to avoid confusion.
It may be necessary to provide further information to retrieve the resource we are citing (e.g. special number), in which case it is enclosed in square brackets right after the title.
For periodicals, the volume information is written in italics separated from the journal title by a comma. The abbreviation Vol. is not used. The number information (if available) is followed by the volume in brackets, without italics and without space, and the range of pages it occupies in the publication separated by a comma. End with a dot at the end of the element.
Do not include the city in which the publisher is located, an internet search by the reader makes the work easy to locate. Information on the place of publication may not be clear in the case of international publishers, publishers with offices in different countries or publishers that only publish in digital format.
Jones, J. W. (2015). Can Science Explain Religion?: The Cognitive Science Debate. Oxford University Press.
Digital identifiers
Include any information that will allow retrieval of the resource in case you have a digital version.
Do not write a full stop after a URL. Do not include information about the database in which the resource is located, as the coverage of a journal in a specific database may change. To avoid noise in the information, do not include unnecessary phrases before the link such as retrieved from, accessible at, DOI, online, etc., as well as consulted on and the date of consultation or access, unless the content is subject to change or it is a legal resource where the date of consultation is relevant information.
Include the DOI whenever the resource has one. The full URL must be included.
Reed, R. (2021). A.I. in Religion, A.I. for Religion, A.I. and Religion: Towards a Theory of Religious Studies and Artificial Intelligence. Religions 12(6), 401. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060401
The DOI uniquely identifies the resource, allows retrieval by readers and facilitates citation counting.
DOI information usually appears on the first page of the article. Crossref has a search tool to complete this information https://search.crossref.org/references
Not only articles have DOIs, but books, book chapters, images, etc. can also have a DOI.
Reference examples
Periodicals
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of the article. Title of Periodical, volume(number), 00-00. https://doi.org/xx.xxxxxxx
Author, A. A. [in press]. Title of the article. Title of Periodical. https://doi.org/xx.xxxxxxx
Books
Author, A. A. (Year). Title. Publisher name.
Author, A. A. (ed.). (Year). Title (X ed.). Publisher name.
Multivolume works
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of the work : Vol. X. Title of the volumen. Publisher name.
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of the work (X ed., Vol. X). Publisher name.
Book chapters
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year). Title of the chapter. In E. Editor & F. Editor (eds.), Title of the book (pp. xx-xx). Publisher name.
Dictionary / Encyclopedia / Reference Works
Title of the entry. (Year, month day). in Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/xxxxxx
Editor. (n.d.). Entry. In Title of the dictionary, encyclopedia. https://dictionary.org/entry
Reports / Working paper
Author, A. A. (Year). Title (Report No. xxx). Publisher name.
Author, A. A. (Year). Title (Working paper No. XXX). https://doi.org/xxxxxx
Thesis
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of Thesis (Doctoral Dissertation). Name of Institution, Location.
Conference sessions
Presenter, A., Presenter, B., & Presenter, C. (Date). Title of contribution [Type of contribution]. Conference name, Location. https://XXXXX
Law
Name of law, title # U.S.C. § section #.
Newspaper
Author, A. (Year, month day). Title of the article. Title of Newspaper. https://url.com/noticia.html
Blog
Autor, A. (Year, month day). Title post. Webpage. https://blog.es/post.html
Video
Author, A. (Year, month day). Title of talk [Video File]. TED Talk. https://ted.com/xxxx
TED. (Year, month day). Title of video [Video File]. YouTube. https://youtube.com/xxxxxxxx
User. (Year, month day). Title of video [video]. YouTube. https://youtube.com/xxxx
Webinar
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of webinar [Webinar]. Institution. https://url.com/xxxxxxx
Podcast
Author, A. (Host). (Date-present). Title of Podcast [Audio podcast]. Spotify. https://open.spotify.com/xxxxxxx
Author, A. (Host). (Year). Title of episode (Season No., Episode No.) [Audio podcast]. In Title of Podcast. Spotify. https://open.spotify.com/xxxxx
Social Network
Author, A. [@username]. (Year, month day). Content of the post up to the first 20 words [description of audiovisuals] [Tweet]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/xxxxx
Author, A., Name of group. [@username]. (Year, month day). Content of the post up to the first 20 words [description of audiovisuals]. Facebook. https://facebook.com/xxxxxxxx
Examples https://apastyle.apa.org/style-grammar-guidelines/references/examples
Copyright Notice
The authors of articles published in Razón y Fe retain the intellectual property rights over their works and grant the journal their distribution and public communication rights, consenting to their publication under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivates 4.0 Internacional. Authors are encouraged to publish their work on the Internet (for example, on institutional or personal pages, repositories, etc.) respecting the conditions of this license and quoting appropriately the original source.
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