Yang Ping planned to start his own journal, not just in thought, but he swiftly put it into action.
A journal is the authority of academic discourse, and in any field, such authority is crucial. Yang Ping had to seize this authority, although pioneering this endeavor was extremely challenging and perhaps thankless, it was a necessity that someone undertook it.
The 13 CNS papers that Yang Ping published this time were just the appetizer; the main event was yet to come, and he decided to publish subsequent results in his own journal.
The soul of a journal lies in its papers; if the papers published in a journal are world-class, then the journal itself is world-class.
World-class is never static, as reflected in the most audacious proverb in our country's history, "Do princes and generals have special origins?"
Following this doctrine—does world-class have a special origin?