Anti-Plagiarism System and AI Policies
Anti-Plagiarism System
To ensure the originality of the texts published in Miscelánea Filosófica αρχή, the journal uses Turnitin software to verify the quality and integrity of the submissions received.
Editorial Policy on the Use of AI
In line with the guiding principles of the National System of Scientific and Humanistic Publications (SNPCyH)—knowledge as a public good, integrity, diversity, equity, and inclusion— this journal recognizes that generative and assisted artificial intelligence (AI) tools can support the processes of writing, editing, and peer review, provided that their use is ethical, transparent, and carried out under the responsibility of the authors, editors, and reviewers.
Artificial intelligence cannot replace human judgment, intellectual originality, or responsibility for published content. The misuse or failure to disclose the use of these tools will be considered a violation of academic integrity.
Permitted Use (Terms of Liability)
The use of AI tools is permitted solely as a technical aid, always under human supervision and with explicit disclosure. Acceptable uses include:
- Grammar, spelling, and style correction.
- Improvement of writing in languages other than the author’s native language.
- Support in translating abstracts, titles, and keywords, particularly to ensure multilingualism (including a national language).
- Suggestions for structure or citation formats, provided they are verified by the author.
- Support in the development of public communication resources for knowledge (infographics, plain-language summaries, etc.), provided that this assistance is indicated.
Prohibited uses
The following practices are not considered acceptable:
- Listing AI as a co-author or author of a manuscript. Intellectual and ethical responsibility rests solely with the individual signatories.
- Generating substantial texts, hypotheses, arguments, conclusions, or fictitious data that are not the product of human intellectual work.
- Including fabricated citations or bibliographic references (hallucinations).
- Using AI for peer review without the journal’s express consent and without direct human supervision.
- Concealing the use of AI at any stage of research, writing, or editing.




