- Jun 10, 2004
 
- 14,600
 
- 6,084
 
- 136
 
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
That's silly. Citing any encyclopedia in a serious research paper is a no-no, whether it's Wikipedia, Britannica, or whatever.
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
That's silly. Citing any encyclopedia in a serious research paper is a no-no, whether it's Wikipedia, Britannica, or whatever.
Originally posted by: sonambulo
Wikipedia fuckin blows. Jimmy Wales fuckin blows.
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
Originally posted by: Flatscan
Which article in particular? Cicero had a number of sub-articles spun-off recently, including Writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero. The Writings article isn't much more than a list and could use expansion. Many of the individual articles look thin, but In Verrem and Pro Milone look like a reasonable stand-alone articles.
Originally posted by: sonambulo
Originally posted by: Flatscan
Which article in particular? Cicero had a number of sub-articles spun-off recently, including Writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero. The Writings article isn't much more than a list and could use expansion. Many of the individual articles look thin, but In Verrem and Pro Milone look like a reasonable stand-alone articles.
The speeches themselves aren't even there. You have to click through, to a site that's not Wikipedia, to get what you're after.
Originally posted by: mugs
The full text of a speech does not belong in an encyclopedia.
mugs makes the point I was going to make. Also, a translation of In Verrem is available at the separate Wikimedia project Wikisource: Against Verres.Originally posted by: mugs
The full text of a speech does not belong in an encyclopedia.Originally posted by: sonambulo
The speeches themselves aren't even there. You have to click through, to a site that's not Wikipedia, to get what you're after.Originally posted by: Flatscan
Which article in particular? Cicero had a number of sub-articles spun-off recently, including Writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero. The Writings article isn't much more than a list and could use expansion. Many of the individual articles look thin, but In Verrem and Pro Milone look like a reasonable stand-alone articles.
Originally posted by: Flatscan
mugs makes the point I was going to make. Also, a translation of In Verrem is available at the separate Wikimedia project Wikisource: Against Verres.Originally posted by: mugs
The full text of a speech does not belong in an encyclopedia.Originally posted by: sonambulo
The speeches themselves aren't even there. You have to click through, to a site that's not Wikipedia, to get what you're after.Originally posted by: Flatscan
Which article in particular? Cicero had a number of sub-articles spun-off recently, including Writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero. The Writings article isn't much more than a list and could use expansion. Many of the individual articles look thin, but In Verrem and Pro Milone look like a reasonable stand-alone articles.
Maybe due to the translated title? There's a link at the end of the Wikipedia article.Originally posted by: mugs
I actually looked for it there but didn't find it.Originally posted by: Flatscan
Also, a translation of In Verrem is available at the separate Wikimedia project Wikisource: Against Verres.![]()
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Flatscan
My thoughts run along these lines. "Don't cite encyclopedias directly" is a simple rule that a good portion of ATOT understands.Originally posted by: mugs
Ugh... Princeton should expel that guy for being a moron and embarrassing the university. Really, I think less of Princeton because they accepted that guy.
I seem to remember someone (maybe you) posting similar sentiments. What kind of "serious info" is lacking?Originally posted by: sonambulo
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
For me, it's the fact that someone can just edit it to reflect their personal beliefs and not necessarily fact.
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Flatscan
My thoughts run along these lines. "Don't cite encyclopedias directly" is a simple rule that a good portion of ATOT understands.Originally posted by: mugs
Ugh... Princeton should expel that guy for being a moron and embarrassing the university. Really, I think less of Princeton because they accepted that guy.
I seem to remember someone (maybe you) posting similar sentiments. What kind of "serious info" is lacking?Originally posted by: sonambulo
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
For me, it's the fact that someone can just edit it to reflect their personal beliefs and not necessarily fact.
But wouldnt you still have to site sources? They've done a decent job on locking down and exposing "unverified" edits.
Originally posted by: mugs
Ugh... Princeton should expel that guy for being a moron and embarrassing the university. Really, I think less of Princeton because they accepted that guy. The problem with wikipedia is not that it's a website, it's not that it can be edited by anyone, and it's not that it's an unreliable source. The problem is that it is an encyclopedia, a tertiary source. An encyclopedia essentially is a collection of research papers. I learned in the sixth grade that you should never use an encyclopedia as a source for a research paper. Cite primary and secondary sources. If you can't handle that, you don't belong at a community college let alone Princeton.
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Originally posted by: Acanthus
I think its fair to say that i use wikipedia extensively for non-serious research projects at college.
I simply go to the cited works in the article and verify them, then use the cited sources as my sources.
This about sums up what most people do, I think.
Originally posted by: sonambulo
Wikipedia fuckin blows. Jimmy Wales fuckin blows.
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Flatscan
My thoughts run along these lines. "Don't cite encyclopedias directly" is a simple rule that a good portion of ATOT understands.Originally posted by: mugs
Ugh... Princeton should expel that guy for being a moron and embarrassing the university. Really, I think less of Princeton because they accepted that guy.
I seem to remember someone (maybe you) posting similar sentiments. What kind of "serious info" is lacking?Originally posted by: sonambulo
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
For me, it's the fact that someone can just edit it to reflect their personal beliefs and not necessarily fact.
But wouldnt you still have to site sources? They've done a decent job on locking down and exposing "unverified" edits.
Nature (the journal) did a comparison between Wikipedia & Britannica. It was a tie. This was a year or so ago. Of course, neither is a valid resource to cite in a college paper. And, their study was related to science articles. Nonetheless, it shows that the "anyone can edit it" problem is *not* a problem. Wikipedia was just as accurate as Encyclopedia Britannica. Someone even pointed out that since Wikipedia's articles were longer than Britannica's, while having the same approximate number of errors, that Wikipedia actually has fewer errors as a percentage of the material.
There are certain topics, especially in politics & current events that I wouldn't trust Wikipedia a bit for. Basically anything were there are two opposing sides of extremists. (i.e. global warming.) However, for basic knowledge (or even slightly advanced knowledge) in many subjects, it's just fine.
Originally posted by: ICRS
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Flatscan
My thoughts run along these lines. "Don't cite encyclopedias directly" is a simple rule that a good portion of ATOT understands.Originally posted by: mugs
Ugh... Princeton should expel that guy for being a moron and embarrassing the university. Really, I think less of Princeton because they accepted that guy.
I seem to remember someone (maybe you) posting similar sentiments. What kind of "serious info" is lacking?Originally posted by: sonambulo
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
For me, it's the fact that someone can just edit it to reflect their personal beliefs and not necessarily fact.
But wouldnt you still have to site sources? They've done a decent job on locking down and exposing "unverified" edits.
Nature (the journal) did a comparison between Wikipedia & Britannica. It was a tie. This was a year or so ago. Of course, neither is a valid resource to cite in a college paper. And, their study was related to science articles. Nonetheless, it shows that the "anyone can edit it" problem is *not* a problem. Wikipedia was just as accurate as Encyclopedia Britannica. Someone even pointed out that since Wikipedia's articles were longer than Britannica's, while having the same approximate number of errors, that Wikipedia actually has fewer errors as a percentage of the material.
There are certain topics, especially in politics & current events that I wouldn't trust Wikipedia a bit for. Basically anything were there are two opposing sides of extremists. (i.e. global warming.) However, for basic knowledge (or even slightly advanced knowledge) in many subjects, it's just fine.
There have been other more recent studies which have shown wikipedia to be significantly less accurate then Britannica.
Originally posted by: sonambulo
Wikipedia fuckin blows. Jimmy Wales fuckin blows.
It's great for pop culture info and a cursory scan about a new subject but it's still junk for serious info.
