> "how can I propose to reject? They are likely better than me"
Funny enough, I see exactly the opposite. I've seen this in both reviews I've done and reviews I've received. Just this week I reviewed and saw one of my fellow reviewers write in their justifications: I am not familiar with X, but I am skeptical that the method can scale to a more complex application. Their weaknesses section was extremely generic and it was very clear they didn't understand the work. They gave a weak reject. In fact, when I first started reviewing, I was explicitly told to _only_ accept if I was confident that the work was good. So in my experience, the bias goes the other way that you are proposing.
Btw, I've even seen undergrads acting as reviewers. I was asked to review in in my first year of grad school. I don't think I was qualified then, but I was always a junior reviewer rather than a full so idk.
Funny enough, I see exactly the opposite. I've seen this in both reviews I've done and reviews I've received. Just this week I reviewed and saw one of my fellow reviewers write in their justifications: I am not familiar with X, but I am skeptical that the method can scale to a more complex application. Their weaknesses section was extremely generic and it was very clear they didn't understand the work. They gave a weak reject. In fact, when I first started reviewing, I was explicitly told to _only_ accept if I was confident that the work was good. So in my experience, the bias goes the other way that you are proposing.
Btw, I've even seen undergrads acting as reviewers. I was asked to review in in my first year of grad school. I don't think I was qualified then, but I was always a junior reviewer rather than a full so idk.