================= HES POSTING ================= We need to be careful about our treatment of Adam Smith's citation practices and not hold him to modern standards. Not only was not citing another's work "a sign that the author . . . did not care for the neglected author's work." In other cases, it was a complement, indicating that the author believed the writer's work was so well known and highly regarded that readers would know instantly to whom the statement belonged. Given the changing nature of citation practices, it is important to hold our predecessors to the standards of their time, not ours. Research project suggestion -- review changing citation practices in economics. Jim Henderson ============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]