• Plagiarism Seen by Scholars In King's Ph.D. Dissertation (2/2)

    From Ronny Koch@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, January 22, 2025 08:11:51
    [continued from previous message]

    dealing with complex theological conceptions, Dr. King lifted
    entire sentences and some longer passages from the works of
    Tillich, Mr. Boozer and other authors.

    In one passage, for example, Dr. King wrote, "The basic
    characteristic of the symbol is its innate power." Mr. Boozer,
    discussing the same concept, wrote, "A characteristic of the
    symbol is its innate power."

    In his academic papers Dr. King occasionally used another
    author's argument as his own, the researchers found, and even
    where he did use citations and footnotes, his reliance on
    previous material was often more extensive than he explicitly
    acknowledged.

    But Mr. Carson said it was important to understand the scholarly
    context of the work. He said it was not uncommon, especially in
    dealing with abstract theological concepts, for interpreters to
    rely on and even paraphrase the same material; in this case, the
    conception of God as set forth by Tillich.

    "That doesn't excuse King, because clearly students are supposed
    to put even difficult and complex thoughts into their own
    words," Mr. Carson said in a telephone interview. "But Tillich
    is particularly difficult because his writing is fairly dense."
    Discovery of Similarities

    Graduate students at Stanford who were working on the papers
    project first noticed similarities in the dissertation to other
    works as early as 1988. They then investigated other academic
    papers, finding a recurrent pattern.

    The findings were presented to the project's advisory board of
    scholars in October 1989, but Mr. Carson, as senior editor,
    decided not to make public any details until the first
    installment of the collected papers was published. The original
    date for publication was the end of this year.

    Mr. Carson said yesterday that the first two volumes of the 14-
    volumne series -- covering Dr. King's early life up to 1955, the
    year of the dissertation -- were now expected to be published,
    with footnotes nearly as extensive as the text itself, in 1992.

    Scholars familiar with the papers say the academic works are Dr.
    King's least important writings and show very little of the
    dramatic orator who was to emerge so forcefully in later years.
    Mr. Garrow, Dr. King's biographer, described the dissertation as
    "dry as bones," and said that was why no one had ever published
    it.

    Mr. Garrow, said that as far back as 1970 he was aware that
    parts of books and articles published by Dr. King after he left
    Boston University probably had been written by others. He said
    Dr. King's speeches also borrowed from others because in the
    oral tradition in which Dr. King lived, it was common for
    ministers and preachers to adopt as their own the words of
    prominent men who had come before them.

    Mr. Lowery of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
    agreed. "Preachers have an old saying," he said. "The first time
    they use somebody else's work, they give credit. The second
    time, they say some thinker said it. The third time they just
    say it." Book to Examine Borrowings

    According to The Wall Street Journal article, Keith Miller, a
    professor of rhetoric at Arizona State University, has written a
    book, soon to be published, that will outline how Dr. King
    borrowed liberally from others, even in some of his most famous
    speeches.

    In trying to explain why the young Dr. King had relied so
    heavily in his academic writings on the work of others, those
    involved speculate that it was perhaps just the strain of that
    time in his life. Dr. King never intended to be a university
    scholar, and wrote most of his dissertation while working as
    pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala.

    While academic experts will resolve the extent of the plagiarism
    and the validity of the doctoral degree, the allegations will
    raise more questions about the character of Dr. King.

    In 1989 the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, in his autobiography
    "And the Walls Came Tumbling Down," published by Harper & Row,
    stated that Dr. King engaged in extramarital sex on the night
    before he was killed. Dr. King's son, Dexter Scott King, was
    also involved in a recent controversy. In August 1989, he was
    made president of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for
    Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, the site of Dr. King's
    crypt. But in a few weeks he resigned in what was reported as a
    family dispute over the direction the center should take. Widow
    Declines to Comment

    Mrs. King, who set up the papers project in 1984 to assure that
    her husband's scattered writings and speeches were collected and
    edited by reliable scholars, would not comment on the latest
    controversy, referring all questions to Mr. Carson at Stanford.

    In October 1989, the editors discussed preliminary manuscripts
    of the King papers with the project's advisory board, which, in
    addition to Mrs. King and Mr. Garrow, includes 11 recognized
    scholars and 8 other associates of Dr. King.

    Shaken by the allegations, Mr. Garrow said he had been
    reconsidering his opinion of Dr. King.

    "This has altered my judgment of him as a person," Mr. Garrow
    said, "though it hasn't shaken my tremendous regard for his
    courage and dedication to his movement."

    Photo: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (The New York Times,
    1956)(pg1); ::There are instances of plagiarism in these
    papers," said Clayborne Carson, who studied the Rev. Dr. Martin
    Luther King Jr.'s doctoral dissertation. (Associated Press) (pg.
    10) Graphic: "Examining 2 Dissertations" In his 1955 doctoral
    thesis, entitled "A Comparison of the Conception of God in the
    Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman," Martin Luther
    King Jr. mentioned secondary literature that had been helpful to
    him, including another doctoral dissertation on Tillich written
    three years earlier by Jack Bozzer, like a King a graduate
    student at Boston University. King appropriated many passages
    from Bozzer's dissertation without footnoting them. An example:
    KING: Tillich insists that a symbol is more than a merely
    technical sign. The basic characteristic of the symbol is its
    inate power. A symbol possesses a necessary character. It cannot
    be exchanged. A sign, on the contrary, is impotent and can be
    exchanged at will. A religious symbol is not the creation of a
    subjective desire or work. If the symbol loses its ontological
    grounding, it declines and becomes a mere "thing," a sign
    impotent in itself. BOOZER: Tillish distinguishes between a sign
    and a symbol. A charateristic of the symbol is its inate power.
    A symbol possesses a necessary character. It cannot be
    exchanged. On the other hand a sign is impotent in itself and
    can be exchanged at will [ ... ] A religious symbol is not the
    creation of a subjective desire or work. If the symbol loses its
    ontological grounding, it declines and becomes a mere "thing," a
    sign impotent in itself. (Source: The Martin Luther King Jr.
    Papers Project, Statement on Research in Progress, Nov. 9, 1990)
    (pg.10)

    http://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/10/us/plagiarism-seen-by-scholars- in-king-s-phd-dissertation.html?pagewanted=all


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