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You already have lots of good answers here. Nevertheless, let me provide one more answer. Actually, three answers. Naturally, my answer is from the perspective of my discipline and my quality of university.

The short answer is: No. It's bad advice. Don't do it.

The slightly longer answer is: No, but you kinda' sorta' have to play along with what your advisor wants. After all, you presumably want to graduate, and you also can't afford to alienate them in the long term (whether you like it or not, there's a good chance they'll be asked to provide a reference for you, etc.).

But the best answer is: Find a better advisor. (First, try persuading them against it. Maybe they're a junior faculty member and have misconceptions about publications. Or something else. Who knows. But odds are anyone who gives this kind of advice likely gives poor research advice, too.)

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