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Intellectual dishonesty: Difference between revisions

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'''Intellectual dishonesty''' is the creation of misleading impressions through the use of ], ], ], or misrepresented evidence. It may stem from an ulterior motive, haste, sloppiness, or external pressure to reach a certain conclusion. The unwary reader may be deceived as a result.
'''Intellectual dishonesty''' nothing in this topic.When someone is you say is good, that means they are your role models! <math>Insert formula here</math>

== Headline text ==
Scientists and scholars generally consider ] a serious form of intellectual dishonesty. Other examples include the incorrect attribution of a quotation or quotation out of context, use of obfuscated or irrelevant citations, deceptive omission of contextual text through ], and the unsupported amplification of a relationship.


==See also== ==See also==
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* ''Some examples:'' ], ], ] * ''Some examples:'' ], ], ]
* ''Compare'': ], ], ], ] * ''Compare'': ], ], ], ]

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Revision as of 09:47, 4 October 2005

Intellectual dishonesty is the creation of misleading impressions through the use of rhetoric, logical fallacy, fraud, or misrepresented evidence. It may stem from an ulterior motive, haste, sloppiness, or external pressure to reach a certain conclusion. The unwary reader may be deceived as a result.

Scientists and scholars generally consider plagiarism a serious form of intellectual dishonesty. Other examples include the incorrect attribution of a quotation or quotation out of context, use of obfuscated or irrelevant citations, deceptive omission of contextual text through ellipsis, and the unsupported amplification of a relationship.

See also

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