Here is another contribution to the DCP plagiarism watchdog thread.
For this example, I draw on Daniel's 2016 paper, published by the Interpreter.
https://journal.interpreterfoundation.o ... lous-work/
"Many Witnesses to a Marvelous Work"
by Daniel C. Peterson
June 10, 2016
This article was published as a book review.
It is not a blog post. It is not "notes." It is a regular entry to the weekly stream of published articles by the Interpreter.
Below, I show side-by-side, that the book review comprises:
- Six instances of extensive plagiarizing previously published material
- Five of which are previously published Deseret News articles, some copied in whole, others with whole sections cut and inserted
- One of which is copy+pasted text from the book under review, lacking proper quotation marks
- 10 original paragraphs, out of 63 total paragraphs (84% plagiarized content)
- Interestingly, other Deseret News articles published by DCP *ARE* cited in the article, for additional clarification on certain points. But the 5 articles from which he plagiarized an overwhelming majority of this book review, those receive no citation or reference whatsoever.
- Of the 10 original paragraphs in this article, 5 offer bland, generic gospel messages (such as, "But what of the content of those plates? What about the substance of the Book of Mormon itself?"), and the other 5 provide a cursory mention the name and author of the contributions to the book being reviewed, some receiving not even a word of review. Eg, "The Coming Forth of the Book of Mormon opens with a chapter (“The Coming Forth of Plain and Precious Truths”) by Elder Merrill J. Bateman, emeritus member of the Seventy, former presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and former president of Brigham Young University."
In other words, the whole article is a form letter, a phone-in, a sham masquerading as new scholarship.
There is hardly one word of "new" thought in the entire 4,287 words. And somehow, it got past peer review and made it out to press in time to save the Interpreter's unbroken streak of weekly publications. At what price, Daniel?
At a very minimum, Interpreter should print an apology for the gross error in source checking, and provide full citations for the plagiarized text. Realizing this would mean 84% of the article is contained in quotes, it might be better to simply retract the article entirely. Being that it's an online-first journal, with some limited print distribution, an apology and retraction in either case is in order.
https://interpreterfoundation.org/submissions/
Citation Sources: All of the articles we publish are thoroughly source-checked.
EDIT: DN source links, on request.
https://www.deseret.com/2015/12/3/20578 ... -Mormonism
https://www.deseret.com/2015/12/31/2057 ... -of-Mormon
https://www.deseret.com/2010/3/18/20375 ... -of-Mormon
https://www.deseret.com/2015/6/25/20567 ... -of-Mormon
https://www.deseret.com/2016/2/11/20582 ... y-expected
https://rsc.BYU.edu/coming-forth-book-m ... ry-america
