Is it appropriate to cite a piece of academic work when the author has been arrested?
It has recently come to my attention that a renowned scholar in my field whose academic journals have been highly influential in my area of research has recently been charged with child pornography. Is it possible to separate the scholar from their work? And will my thesis research, in turn, be judged for referencing the work?
publications citations thesis authorship
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It has recently come to my attention that a renowned scholar in my field whose academic journals have been highly influential in my area of research has recently been charged with child pornography. Is it possible to separate the scholar from their work? And will my thesis research, in turn, be judged for referencing the work?
publications citations thesis authorship
New contributor
2
Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago
add a comment |
It has recently come to my attention that a renowned scholar in my field whose academic journals have been highly influential in my area of research has recently been charged with child pornography. Is it possible to separate the scholar from their work? And will my thesis research, in turn, be judged for referencing the work?
publications citations thesis authorship
New contributor
It has recently come to my attention that a renowned scholar in my field whose academic journals have been highly influential in my area of research has recently been charged with child pornography. Is it possible to separate the scholar from their work? And will my thesis research, in turn, be judged for referencing the work?
publications citations thesis authorship
publications citations thesis authorship
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 2 hours ago
Brittany DeMoneBrittany DeMone
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Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago
2
2
Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago
Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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Of course it is appropriate. Why not? They did relevant work, so you have to cite them. With citing, you do your duty -- you are in no way saying you "like" the cited persons.
Of course, I am assuming that their research is sound and is not somehow influenced by the child pornography. It was a different case if there were problems with the research.
On the other hand, not citing them could get you into big (or small) trouble.
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I think that in almost every field you can separate the work from the person who did it. Many people in the history of science and mathematics, at least, have turned out to have "feet of clay." You aren't tainted because you use someone's work.
The only exception I can think of is if the charge of misconduct is somehow related to the research - unlikely.
The Unabomber was a prize-winning mathematician before he turned evil. His mathematical work doesn't disappear from history.
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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Of course it is appropriate. Why not? They did relevant work, so you have to cite them. With citing, you do your duty -- you are in no way saying you "like" the cited persons.
Of course, I am assuming that their research is sound and is not somehow influenced by the child pornography. It was a different case if there were problems with the research.
On the other hand, not citing them could get you into big (or small) trouble.
New contributor
add a comment |
Of course it is appropriate. Why not? They did relevant work, so you have to cite them. With citing, you do your duty -- you are in no way saying you "like" the cited persons.
Of course, I am assuming that their research is sound and is not somehow influenced by the child pornography. It was a different case if there were problems with the research.
On the other hand, not citing them could get you into big (or small) trouble.
New contributor
add a comment |
Of course it is appropriate. Why not? They did relevant work, so you have to cite them. With citing, you do your duty -- you are in no way saying you "like" the cited persons.
Of course, I am assuming that their research is sound and is not somehow influenced by the child pornography. It was a different case if there were problems with the research.
On the other hand, not citing them could get you into big (or small) trouble.
New contributor
Of course it is appropriate. Why not? They did relevant work, so you have to cite them. With citing, you do your duty -- you are in no way saying you "like" the cited persons.
Of course, I am assuming that their research is sound and is not somehow influenced by the child pornography. It was a different case if there were problems with the research.
On the other hand, not citing them could get you into big (or small) trouble.
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New contributor
answered 2 hours ago
guest2guest2
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I think that in almost every field you can separate the work from the person who did it. Many people in the history of science and mathematics, at least, have turned out to have "feet of clay." You aren't tainted because you use someone's work.
The only exception I can think of is if the charge of misconduct is somehow related to the research - unlikely.
The Unabomber was a prize-winning mathematician before he turned evil. His mathematical work doesn't disappear from history.
add a comment |
I think that in almost every field you can separate the work from the person who did it. Many people in the history of science and mathematics, at least, have turned out to have "feet of clay." You aren't tainted because you use someone's work.
The only exception I can think of is if the charge of misconduct is somehow related to the research - unlikely.
The Unabomber was a prize-winning mathematician before he turned evil. His mathematical work doesn't disappear from history.
add a comment |
I think that in almost every field you can separate the work from the person who did it. Many people in the history of science and mathematics, at least, have turned out to have "feet of clay." You aren't tainted because you use someone's work.
The only exception I can think of is if the charge of misconduct is somehow related to the research - unlikely.
The Unabomber was a prize-winning mathematician before he turned evil. His mathematical work doesn't disappear from history.
I think that in almost every field you can separate the work from the person who did it. Many people in the history of science and mathematics, at least, have turned out to have "feet of clay." You aren't tainted because you use someone's work.
The only exception I can think of is if the charge of misconduct is somehow related to the research - unlikely.
The Unabomber was a prize-winning mathematician before he turned evil. His mathematical work doesn't disappear from history.
edited 2 hours ago
answered 2 hours ago
BuffyBuffy
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Brittany DeMone is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Brittany DeMone is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Brittany DeMone is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Brittany DeMone is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Related: How does it affect the treatment of a mathematician's results, if that mathematician was a Nazi?
– Thomas
2 hours ago