Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Cite. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Cite Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Bruno Frey,Samuel Laman Blanchard,Tom Rachman,Kathy Acker,Ru Freeman for you to enjoy and share.
Scholars today are under increasing pressure to publish. Consequences of this pressure are incentives to deviate from the truth
Of all the many and (thanks to a free press) the ever-multiplying blessings attendant upon the "glorious constitution" of literature, not the least precious and profitable to a modern cultivator of systems and syllables, in pamphlets, magazines, and folios, is the right of Quotation.
He cannot deny a certain relief in being able to sift through academic tomes, fulfilling his journalistic duty without having to barge past security guards at the Arab League or grab man-on-the-street from women at the market. This library work is easily his favorite part of reporting so far.
Literature is that which denounces and slashes apart the repressing machine at the level of the signified.
There are other sources, but Wikipedia is a good start.
Research is a passion with me; it drives me; it is my relentless master.
In conclusion, here's my advice to aspiring writers, journalists, and future lawyers - or anyone planning on working in the communications field: if you want an accurate account of any story, go to the primary sources. They know what really happened.
The SAGE OF RESEARCH
The bibliophile is the master of his books, the bibliomaniac their slave.
If there is a bibliographic equivalent of alcoholism, many librarians have it.
[An example of misattribution:]
If you don't know the source of a quote,
you can always make it sound better by attributing it to me.
- Mark Twain
What people actually refer to as research nowadays is really just Googling.
Thanks to modern technology, we now can deliver every text in every research library to every citizen in our country, and to everyone in the world. If we fail to do so, we are not living up to our civic duty.
I mention this only to shew that the citations of the most judicious authors frequently deceive us, and consequently that prudence obliges us to examine quotations, by whomsoever alleged.
Literature must be an analysis of experience and a synthesis of the findings into a unity.
He who quotes himself has a fool for a source.
Cunning authors cut to be quoted.
I am due at the page.
As authors evolve and try to trace the precedents that have shaped their work, it sometimes becomes a matter of identifying the shadowy figure in the back row of the mental photograph, or of grabbing at the tail of a memory that's just slipping out the window into thin air.
Abstract academic discussions have a way of leaving their mark on entire civilizations, as the events of this century have proved all too well.
The biggest threat to authors in this age is not plagiarism or poverty, it's obscurity
I am only too aware that I am open to Rees's Second Law of Quotation: However sure you are that you have attributed a quotation correctly, an earlier source will be pointed out to you.
In quoting of books, quote such authors as are usually read; others you may read for your own satisfaction, but not name them.
Dare to research on the originality of any information.
Wikipedia is a victory of process over substance.
The post-war "publish or perish" tyranny must end. The profession has become obsessed with quantity rather than quality. [ ... ] One brilliant article should outweigh one mediocre book.
As a graduate student at Oxford in 1963, I began writing about books in revolutionary France, helping to found the discipline of book history. I was in my academic corner writing about Enlightenment ideals when the Internet exploded the world of academic communication in the 1990s.
As a research tool, the internet is invaluable.
Bibliomancy: Divination by jolly well Looking It Up.
Search for the truth is the noblest occupation of man; its publication is a duty.
It's a small publication dedicated to a scholarly discourse of the Osamaverse.
Literature adds to reality, it does not simply describe it. It enriches the necessary competencies that daily life requires and provides; and in this respect, it irrigates the deserts that our lives have already become.
The way to do research is to attack the facts at the point of greatest astonishment.
Orientalism is after all a system for citing works and authors . Orientalism
A large part of academic community is unthinkingly self-involved, producing reams of sterile writing - often consuming unbelievable amounts of public funds - and serving as an instruction manual for how to chase away readers and ignore historical insights.
Research must continue to be the centerpiece of intellectual life, and our commitment to research must grow, because our problems are growing.
The ceaseless, senseless demand for original scholarship in a number of fields, where only erudition is now possible, has led either to sheer irrelevancy, the famous knowing of more and more about less and less, or to the development of a pseudo-scholarship which actually destroys its object.
Opinion has a significance proportioned to the sources that sustain it.
Literature professes to be important while at the same time considering itself an object of doubt. It confirms itself as it disparages itself. It seeks itself: this is more than it has a right to do, because literature may be one of those things which deserve to be found but not to be sought.
Attribution is power.
The motives of the writer form as important an ingredient in the analysis or his history, as the facts he records. Probability is a powerful and troublesome test; and it is by this troublesome standard that a large portion of historical evidence is sifted.
One can measure the importance of a scientific work by the number of earlier publications rendered superfluous by it.
False attributions are the bane of legitimate discourse.
I never do research unless it's extraordinary circumstances.
Famous remarks are very seldom quoted correctly.
Literature, properly so called, draws its sap from the deep soil of human nature's common and everlasting sympathies, the gathered leaf-mound of countless generations, and not from any top dressing capriciously scattered over the surface.
Research now means a Google search.
A knowledge of general literature is one of the evidences of an enlightened mind; and to give an apt quotation at a fitting time, proves that the mind is stored with sentential lore that can always be used to great advantage by its possessor.
In science, address the few, in literature the many. In science, the few must dictate opinion to the many; in literature, the many, sooner or later, force their judgement on the few.
I shall never be ashamed of citing a bad author if the line is good.
Writers and intellectuals have a duty to humanity. It is to insist that the human entity remains the primary asset in overall development; thus, it must be safeguarded.
If you copy from one author, it's plagiarism, but if you copy from many, it's research.
The farther away you get from the literary traffic, the closer you are to sources.
Every citizen must be actively aware of, participating in, and overseeing research, and that research should be focused on creating prosperity and peace, not war and poverty or suicidal needs.
Transparency, which engenders truth, is the foundation for all this.
the top 10% of people who buy a nonfiction book.
Research is a wonderful word for writers. It serves as excuse for EVERYTHING
Basic research leads to new knowledge," Bush wrote. "It provides scientific capital. It creates the fund from which the practical applications of knowledge must be drawn.
The scientific and scholarly community is marked by the belief that the truth is to be found in all; none can claim it as their monopoly.
The writer Wilson Mizner said if you copy from one author, it's plagiarism, but if you copy from many, it's research. I
The academic mind can eat away the very basis of its own assurance ... produce contortions when it tries to bend over backward ... allow itself to be dismayed by the picture it has created of relentless historical process.
If you steal from one author it's plagiarism; if you steal from many it's research.
To turn events into ideas is the function of literature.
Stealing from one author is plagiarism; from many authors, research.
She did not want to read this book from start to finish, or rather, she thought perhaps it did not want her to. Instead she practiced the art of bibliomancy, trusting the book to show her what it wanted her to know.
An article can be timely, topical, engaged in the issues and personalities of the moment; it is likely to be stale within the month. In five years, it may have acquired the quaint aura of a rotary phone. An article is usually Siamese-twinned to its date of birth.
The objective of hypertext research is to save the planet.
The simplest and cheapest of all reforms within institutional science is to switch from the passive to the active voice in writing about science.
I don't need to always quote others because I actually have original thoughts".
~R. Alan Woods [2012]
Misquotation is the pride and privilege of the learned.
Accurate scholarship can
unearth the whole offence
from luther untill noe
that has driven a culture mad.
From what occured at linz
what huge imago made
a psychopathic god.
i and the public know
what all schoolchildren learn
those to whom evil is done
do evil in return.
Steal from the best, and call it research!
Literature is like phosphorus: it shines with its maximum brilliance and the moment when it attempts to die.
The people who work in the scientific field, they need help to convey what it's about.
Our world requires that decisions be sourced and footnoted, and if we say how we feel, we must also be prepared to elaborate on why we feel that way ... We need to respect the fact that it is possible to know without knowing why we know and accept that - sometimes - we're better off that way.
I always use primary sources, in addition to reading biographies and other materials.
Quotations
always inexact. I don't trust people who cannot even copy out.
I've compiled a book from the Internet. It's a book of quotations attributed to the wrong people.
You came from a source.Source-- Wayne Dyer
If you are a researcher, you are trying to figure out what the question is as well as what the answer is.
Don't make the error of believing the papers know everything, and strive to know everything the papers won't believe.
But what all these responses have in common is that they point to the decisive power of information and stories [ ... ]
I now rely on a scanner, which reproduces the passages I want to cite, and then I keep my own comments on those books in a separate file so that I will never confuse the two again.
There are a significant number of learned men and women who hold that any successful effort to make ideas lively, intelligible and interesting is a manifestation of deficient scholarship. This is the fortress behind which the minimally coherent regularly find refuge.
Research is of considerable importance in certain fields, such as science and history.
Google' is not a synonym for 'research'.
[redacted: no source given].
A Wikipedia article is a process, not a product.
Scholars may quote Plato in studies, but the hearts of millions shall quote the Bible at their daily toil, and draw strength from its inspiration, as the meadows draw it from the brook.
He flaunted obnoxious feats of memory by quoting page numbers and passages back in class and correcting his teachers on their text citations.14 "You forgot the comma," he said to one.15
Research is appreciation.
Next to the originator of a good sentence is the first quoter of it.
Pierre Bourdieu once noted that, if the academic field is a game in which scholars strive for dominance, then you know you have won when other scholars start wondering how to make an adjective out of your name
When you're working well, you don't do research. Whatever you need comes to you.
Basic scientific research is scientific capital.
The text is merely one of the contexts of a piece of literature, its lexical or verbal one, no more or less important than the sociological, psychological, historical, anthropological or generic.
Rees's First Law of Quotations: When in doubt, ascribe all quotations to George Bernard Shaw.
Literature cannot be imposed; it must be discovered.
You could have the best idea in the world, but if people don't like you, don't trust you, or don't know you, they're not going to consider it. However, if you cite what someone else is saying, someone they might have heard of, that lends the idea more credibility.
I do not know whether to be delighted or outraged by the fact that Literary Theory: An Introduction was the subject of a study by a well known U.S. business school, which was intrigued to discover how an academic text could become a best-seller.
If nobody quotes you, you haven't said a thing worth saying.