I think your comment is getting voted down because it doesn’t actually answer the issue in question. It does allow there to be a set of citable papers, but it doesn’t deal with the actual question which is how any given paper would ever get its first citation.
Yes, it does, because paper B, from after the cutoff, cites a cite-less paper A, from before the cutoff. Then a paper C can cite B (or A), as B cites a previous paper, and A is from a time for which the standard today is not applied. (Perhaps I wasn’t clear that the cutoff also applies to citable papers—papers from before the cutoff don’t themselves need citations in them to be citable.)
Edit: Also, papers from before the cutoff cited other prior papers.
It’s not citing but being cited, I think. So if A and B are both before the cutoff, and A cites B, then C from after the cutoff can cite B (but not necessarily A).
I think your comment is getting voted down because it doesn’t actually answer the issue in question. It does allow there to be a set of citable papers, but it doesn’t deal with the actual question which is how any given paper would ever get its first citation.
Yes, it does, because paper B, from after the cutoff, cites a cite-less paper A, from before the cutoff. Then a paper C can cite B (or A), as B cites a previous paper, and A is from a time for which the standard today is not applied. (Perhaps I wasn’t clear that the cutoff also applies to citable papers—papers from before the cutoff don’t themselves need citations in them to be citable.)
Edit: Also, papers from before the cutoff cited other prior papers.
It’s not citing but being cited, I think. So if A and B are both before the cutoff, and A cites B, then C from after the cutoff can cite B (but not necessarily A).