Originally posted by Ally
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Let’s Talk About Plagiarism
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Originally posted by jmenges View PostSeveral years ago there was an entire ebook published and sold that copied all of its content off of Casebook. I can’t remember the name of it. Which brings me to ask this question. If an author cites contemporary newspaper articles in their book that they actually found in the Casebook Press Reports section...should the author cite the Casebook online source or is it OK for them to simply cite the original newspaper? Citing only the newspaper gives the impression to the reader that they did “research” when in actuality they were just using the search engine in the Press Reports.
A hypothetical question as I don’t have a specific example in mind...
JM
This kind of citation, however, should be used extremely sparingly, and only resorted to if one cannot view the original source. That's the whole point of citations. If an author reads something on Casebook, and wants to include reference to that source material, they absolutely should go and view the original material. Make sure they are citing the information they claim to be citing. Otherwise, errors propagate that should never do so, and it's dishonest as well. A citation is you claiming to have viewed the material you cite, not viewed someone else's citation of that material. If you're doing the latter, you cite as such - and yes, it also signals to the reader something about the author's research approach, and lazy and incomplete come to mind.
- Jeff
Oh, I should point out, that's how it's done in my field of research (cognitive psychology, no, not related to clinical disorders, etc, but basic principles of perception and cognition - real wild at parties I'll tell you )
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