• The problem of MLK's plagiarism

    From Ronny Koch@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, January 27, 2019 14:01:31
    XPost: alt.politics.liberalism, soc.culture.kenya, alt.politics.nationalism.white
    XPost: alt.war.civil.usa
    From: rkoch@banmlkday.com

    We’re not much these days for icons. Washington owned slaves,
    and Jefferson almost certainly slept with at least one of his
    slaves, whom he never freed. JFK was a serial philanderer,
    Tricky Dick actually was a crook, and MLK was an academic fraud
    no more entitled to be called Doctor King than I am.

    Oh, wait, I forgot: King is our one remaining icon.

    So, like the naked emperor’s subjects, we just don’t talk about
    the fact that, according to Encyclopedia Brittanica’s Executive
    Director Theodore Pappas, King lifted a mind-boggling 60% of his
    doctoral dissertation from other sources without crediting them.

    While preparing his writings for publication in the late ’80s,
    the editors of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Research and
    Education Institute at Stanford noticed what they called
    “extensive plagiaries” in all his academic papers, including his
    dissertation. Stanford professor and Director of the King
    Institute Clayborne Carson found that both King’s student papers
    and his later essays and addresses all contained “numerous
    instances of plagiarism and, more generally, textual
    appropriation.”

    In 1991, according to the New York Times, a panel of scholars at
    Boston University, appointed by the provost to study the alleged
    plagiarism in King’s dissertation, reported after a year’s study:

    There is no question but that Dr. King plagiarized in the
    dissertation by appropriating material from sources not
    explicitly credited in notes, or mistakenly credited, or
    credited generally and at some distance in the text from a close
    paraphrase or verbatim quotation.

    Civil rights historian Ralph E. Luker has written of his and
    Carson’s discovery of King’s horrendous plagiarism:

    What became increasingly clear as we worked through the papers
    from King’s early career is that there were serious problems of
    plagiarism in his academic work. … [T]hey were a patchwork of
    his own language and the language of scholars, often without
    clear attribution. If anything, the pattern seemed to be that
    the more familiar King was with a subject, the less likely he
    was to plagiarize. On matters that were fairly alien to his
    experience, he borrowed heavily from others and often with only
    the slightest wink of attribution. To take two extreme examples,
    an autobiographical paper,”Autobiography of Religious
    Development” has no significant plagiarism in it; his paper on
    “The Chief Characteristics and Doctrines of Mahayana Buddhism,”
    however, is composed almost exclusively of paragraphs lifted
    from the best secondary sources available to him. Moreover, the
    further King went in his academic career, the more deeply
    ingrained the patterns of borrowing language without clear
    attribution became. Thus, the plagiarism in his dissertation
    seemed to be, by then, the product of his long established
    practice. [Emphasis mine]

    Incredibly, Boston University decided simply to put a note in
    King’s dissertation, pointing out the pervasive plagiarism, but
    found that revoking King’s doctorate would “serve no purpose.”

    Say what?

    We struggle with pandemic plagiarism in universities, but
    revoking the doctorate of a famous guy who stole most of his
    dissertation would serve no purpose? How about the purpose of
    sending a warning to students and researchers that we take
    cheating seriously? Or how about the simple purpose of
    intellectual honesty and truth-telling?

    The civil rights movement is clearly an important part of our
    history. It’s probably important enough to deserve a day of
    celebration. (I hesitate only because, if it is, it’s odd that
    the enfranchisement of 51% of America, which didn’t occur until
    1920, apparently isn’t important enough to merit its own day of
    remembrance.) And MLK is certainly an appropriate symbol of the
    civil rights movement.

    Does that mean we need to talk only about his tremendous
    accomplishments and hide his shocking lack of character?

    No.

    Let’s ditch the unfounded respect accorded to Rev. King by the
    title “Doctor.” He was a liar and a cheat. He didn’t earn the
    Ph.D. and he doesn’t deserve the title. He is as deeply flawed
    as most of our other national leaders. Let’s quit pretending
    otherwise.

    http://crybelovedcountry.com/2012/01/the-problem-of-mlks-
    plagiarism/
     

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    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)