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It's not academic dishonesty.

When you read plenty of papers you aren't going to read them again to cite them. You take them from your read.bib file.

Also citations generally don't link to a passage. They are pointers to an entire paper.



> When you read plenty of papers you aren't going to read them again to cite them.

But in fact I do exactly that, exactly because experience has taught me that my memory of what is in a paper is fallible and I should at least cursorily review what I'm citing. In a few cases I've even just deleted something entirely because my premise was based on a recollection of what I intended to cite that was subtly wrong enough to fatally undermine my entire thesis.

I'm not saying you have to read an entire paper over completely every time you cite it but at least pulling it up and reviewing the parts that are informing your argument is definitely a best practice.




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