Abstract

Based on the identification of subject- and resource-oriented types of citations, the principle of unity of historical and logical and R. Merton's thesis about the dual purpose of standard methodological operations, the analysis of the historical array of philosophical and scientific literature was carried out. In the Middle Ages resource borrowing from high-status sources flourished and a culture of referencing began to take shape. At the same time the structures of citation lie at a deeper semantic level than that at which the text can be parsed into discrete argumentative constructions. In the Renaissance there is no stable orientation to a particular model of citation.

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