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-   -   Kaavya Viswanathan (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=3426)

innerSpaceman 04-27-2006 03:49 PM

^ If you weren't an idiot, as well as a plagerist.



Hmmmph, shows you what kind of dolts they admit to Harvard nowadays.

Janie 04-27-2006 03:59 PM

Harvard isn't all that great. When I met my best friend's DH who graduated from Harvard, he was boring as a pair of used bedroom slippers and his "snooty Harvard" attitude grated on my nerves but then again, I'm fully aware that my attitude grates on some people's nerves.:D

Alex 04-27-2006 04:07 PM

Like I said, I do it all the time without realizing I'm using the exact same words as someone else. It is actually someone that causes me to seize up whenever I try to write fiction and I know someone has written anything remotely similar.

But she's 19. She got herself into a situation with a lot of hype and a lot of pressure. I can easily believe that she decided to cheat but I can easily believe that it was unconscious on her part.

Matterhorn Fan 04-27-2006 04:09 PM

Unconscious or not, plagiarism is plagiarism.

Alex 04-27-2006 04:11 PM

I'm not saying its not. But she has owned up to the plagiarism part of it. If she is telling the truth about it being unintentional then she has handled it quite graciously in my opinion.

If she is lying about it then she should be scorned. I'm just saying that I'm willing to take her at her word with the information I currently have about it all.

Moonliner 04-27-2006 06:02 PM

I don't know. I'm willing to give her the benefit of the doubt if she is anything like me (and I haven't looked at the passages closely).

Not to be immodest but I have a pretty powerful memory for exact writing when it is something that clicks with me. It isn't uncommon for me, when trying to summarize someone's writing to end up using exact or near exact passaages without intending to. This was useful when I took the AP History exam and I was able to quote several consecutive paragraphs of a Thomas Jefferson essay from memory. Not so useful when I don't realize I'm doing it, which is often.

I can easily see sitting down to right a book in a style inspired by some specific books I've read and unintentionally spewing out very similar and at times exactly similar segments without realizing I had moved so close to the source material.

If the passages are all short like I've seen in newspaper articles then I'll cut her slack. If some are longer then I'll turn on her.

I also don't see why Harvard should get involved (as many have been saying Harvard should expel her). She wrote the books after she was accepted and they are entirely separate from her academic work (though professors might want to take a closer look at anything she has written for them).

Alex 04-27-2006 06:45 PM

Couldn't have said it better myself.

Not Afraid 04-27-2006 07:22 PM

So, why is it you remember things with exactitude but you don't remember that they came from somdwhere else?

Alex 04-27-2006 07:37 PM

Because I'm not remembering them as exact. I store away what I read and then when I try to write about things later my brain spews out words and stuff. It's not photographic like I can picture in my head the page with the words on them, they are just the words that come out when I try to write about something. 99% of the time it is completely original composition. But not an insignificant amount of the time my brain just spits it back out the way it went in. If I am specifically trying to regurgitate something I will realize it but if not then it passes unnoticed.

In short, I don't know why.

Not Afraid 04-27-2006 07:40 PM

Fascinating.

I have a horrible linear memory but my visual memory is great. I just think it is interesting how the mind works - or doesn't.


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