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Pseudo-scholarship (from pseudo-and scholarship) is a term used to describe work (e.g., publication, lecture) or a body of work that is presented as, but is not, the product of rigorous and objective study or research; the act of producing such work; or the pretended learning upon which it is based. [1] Examples of pseudo-scholarship include:
About Category:Pseudo-scholarship and related categories: This category's scope contains articles about Pseudo-scholarship, which may be a contentious label The main article for this category is Pseudo-scholarship .
Fringe theories include the models and proposals of fringe science, as well as similar ideas in other areas of scholarship, such as the humanities. In a narrower sense, the term fringe theory is commonly used as a pejorative, roughly synonymous with the term pseudo-scholarship.
Pseudoscientific [1] language comparison is a form of pseudo-scholarship that aims to establish historical associations between languages by naïve postulations of similarities between them. While comparative linguistics also studies how languages are historically related, linguistic comparisons are deemed pseudoscientific when they do not ...
About Category:Pseudolinguistics and related categories: This category's scope contains articles about Pseudo-scholarship, which may be a contentious label. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
A. Robert Adams (sailor) African Atlantis; African Queens (TV series) African heritage of presidents of the United States; Afrocentrism; Ages in Chaos; Ahnenerbe
Pseudo-Zacharias Rhetor is the designation used by modern scholarship for the anonymous 6th-century author who compiled a twelve-part history in the Syriac language around 569. It contains portions of the otherwise lost Ecclesiastical History of the real Zacharias Rhetor .
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