Lemmie wrote:Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:We're up to what? Three pheughk yews now? I feel like JP is handing out f-yous like Oprah hands out cars...
ANYWAY.
Can a brutha get himself sum more of dat plagiarism? It's funner to out Plagiarizin' Peterson than to figure out JP's latest post.
- Doc
You read my mind Doc! I realized that earlier in the thread, i said to Jesse Pinkman that Peterson had plagiarized twice from Pearcey's Chapter, "Darwin meets the Berenstain Bears," but that I hadn't provided documentation for that other Pearcey plagiarization, so here you go:
Peterson posted a log entry on October 23, 2017, entitled:
What difference does Darwinism make?
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/danpeterso ... 3585799864
which is lifted almost in its entirety from Pearcey's chapter 4 in the book Uncommon Dissent:
"Darwin meets the Berenstain Bears."
This blog entry has 6 paragraphs, starting with paragraph 1:DCP wrote:From another of those manuscripts, some notes in a fairly raw state:
He starts off easy in paragraph two, taking Pearcey's ideas but adding some words of his own:and Peterson's version:Pearcey wrote:Why does the public care so passionately about a theory of biology? Because people sense intuitively that there’s much more at stake than a scientific theory.DCP wrote:Why does the public care so much about Darwinism and evolution? Nobody becomes exercised over quantum mechanics, the role of chlorophyll in photosynthesis, or general relativity. It is because Darwinism is not merely a theory in biology but a world view, with profound implications for our understanding of our own nature and for our sense of our relationship to the universe. Whether they can articulate this or not, most people grasp it intuitively. And they are entirely right.
paragraph 3 to the end, however, are directly and completely plagiarized from Pearcey:Pearcey wrote:John Dewey penned a famous essay called “The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy,” where he announced that Darwinism had given rise to a “new logic to apply to mind and morals and life.”38DCP, para 3, wrote:In an essay entitled “The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy,” the famous American philosopher John Dewey declared that Darwinism had given rise to a “new logic to apply to mind and morals and life.”[1]Pearcey wrote:As one leader in the Ohio controversy put it, “A naturalistic definition of science has the effect of indoctrinating students into a naturalistic worldview.”1DCP, para 4, wrote:As a participant in the textbook wars relating to evolution has expressed it, “A naturalistic definition of science has the effect of indoctrinating students into a naturalistic worldview.”[2]Pearcey wrote:In fact, Darwinian naturalism is being targeted to even younger children. A few years ago, I picked up a book for my little boy called The Berenstain Bears’ Nature Guide. In it, the Bear family invites the reader on a nature walk, and after a few pages, we open to a two-page spread, glazed with the light of the rising sun, proclaiming in capital letters: “Nature … is all that IS, or WAS, or EVER WILL BE!”23DCP, para 4 continued, wrote:And the indoctrination has not remained confined to school curricula. As the 1975 children’s book The Bears’ Nature Guide, featuring the Berenstain Bears, informs its young audience, “Nature . . . is all that IS, or WAS, or EVER WILL BE!”[3]Pearcey wrote: "The Darwinian revolution was not merely the replacement of one scientific theory by another," the great zoologist Ernst Mayr once
said, "but rather the replacement of a worldview, in which the supernatural was accepted as a normal and relevant explanatory principle, by a new worldview in which there was no room for supernatural forces."34DCP, para 5, wrote:“The Darwinian revolution,” wrote the famous zoologist Ernst Mayr, “was not merely the replacement of one scientific theory by another, but rather the replacement of a worldview, in which the supernatural was accepted as a normal and relevant explanatory principle, by a new worldview in which there was no room for supernatural forces.” [4]Pearcey wrote:When Darwin's theory was accepted in biology, says historian Edward Purcell, its broader implication was understood to be a new theory of knowledge generally. People working in fields outside of science—the soc'al sclences, law, and politics—came to see that Darwinism implied "a wholly naturalistic and empirically orientcd world view." In this worldview, theological dogmas became "at worst totally fraudulent and at best merely symbolic of deep human aspirations." 36how can this possibly be seen as unintentional plagiarism? This is intentional.DCP, para 6, wrote:As historian Edward Purcell notes, people working in subject areas far afield from biology soon came to understand that Darwinism implied “a wholly naturalistic and empirically oriented world view” in which theological doctrines were to be viewed as “at worst totally fraudulent and at best merely symbolic of deep human aspirations.”[5]
I agree that he should have credited Pearcey in this. I’m not seeing where he did. He does footnote everything else. I would attribute this to carelessness, but I understand where you are coming from with this. I think it comes down to what kind of a person you think DCP is. Obviously, a lot of folks here don’t like him. He is no angel. He has managed to piss off a lot of people, including me at times. Dan told me himself that he has feared being caught up in unintentional plagiarism because he tends to take quick notes on different articles and doesn’t always write down the origin he has taken notes from. It looks like that is what has happened here. It isn’t an excuse. Obviously, Dan needs to be a lot more careful in his documentation of sources. But I see it more as an example of rushed, careless writing rather than true intentional plagiarism. He should have taken the time to find the name of the article he took notes from and attributed the author for the work.
Again, I have never stated that Dan wasn’t guilty of plagiarism. My argument is whether or not his plagiarism was intentional. I know that most here see this as intentional. I do not. And hopefully, if Dan is reported to either BYU or Deseret News for this, they will not see it as intentional either.
ETA-What I will suggest to Dan, is to take a look at this thread. Lemmie, you have actually done a lot of homework for him. It would be easy enough for him to go back through the articles he has written and add in the sources you have cited that were omitted.