I use it a lot but not as a main reference. If I'm on the internet (which is most of the time) and I need to find out something, to Wikipedia!
Yeah I also like the fact that after a trip through wikipedia, dipshits suddenly turn into e-geniuses (what the fuck happened to hard work and actually studying?)...cleverlymadeup said:wikipedia has a fun law of averages thing going. the fact that everyone can edit it actually helps make it more accurate. i do find it funny when people try and discredit your argument cause "you used wikipedia" it shows how little they actually know about the process
there was a philosopher that said that lower class people shouldn't vote cause they were stupid and didn't have the ability to rule properly. so he proposed a test to show that he was right. he had them guess the weight of a cow. now no one single guess was correct, however if you took the average of all the guesses they got it right.
the fact that the not one person was correct but the whole group was correct
I sense a conspiracy theory coming on : P, although you have a point. I know alot of people who get their facts wrong because they have read it off the internet where as I can pull out a book that proves them wrong.Rutawitz said:how do we know that anything posted on the internet is true?
It's not so much a conspiracy as a self-fulfilling prophecy. It has happened so many times that a journal took information from Wikipedia and printed it in an article, after which the Wikipedia article stated said journal as a source for the information. It's like the perfect information crime.SeventySeven said:I sense a conspiracy theory coming on : P, although you have a point. I know alot of people who get their facts wrong because they have read it off the internet where as I can pull out a book that proves them wrong.Rutawitz said:how do we know that anything posted on the internet is true?
I normally go straight to wikipedia, read the introduction to get an idea then search around the net and look for common information, so then I know it is true. Too many times have I visited a website and its 'facts' have been wrong.
There is a critical thinking rule about something like that and it goes likeRutawitz said:how do we know that anything posted on the internet is true?
gaah, a loop. My teachers have always told me to go to wikipedia and use the references for information, however I never liked the idea for that reason and also you can find a perfectly decent website normally.woem said:It's not so much a conspiracy as a self-fulfilling prophecy. It has happened so many times that a journal took information from Wikipedia and printed it in an article, after which the Wikipedia article stated said journal as a source for the information. It's like the perfect information crime.SeventySeven said:I sense a conspiracy theory coming on : P, although you have a point. I know alot of people who get their facts wrong because they have read it off the internet where as I can pull out a book that proves them wrong.Rutawitz said:how do we know that anything posted on the internet is true?
I normally go straight to wikipedia, read the introduction to get an idea then search around the net and look for common information, so then I know it is true. Too many times have I visited a website and its 'facts' have been wrong.
Er.asinann said:Wikipedia is at best a secondary reference tool to be used after you have a couple of good sources.
Wikipedia by itself is not a reference tool. When a good academic university, or even my local community college allow it's use as a reference tool, I'll call it one.
This, pretty much. I turn to a book if I'm really interested in the subject.DVSAurion said:If I wanna be quick, I use wikipedia. If I'm really interested in the subject, I don't.
That's always been my response to claims that Wiki is not reliable. Guaranteed, if something in Wiki is wrong, there will be ten people who will rise up and correct it almost immediately.MaxTheReaper said:99% of everything on the internet is user-generated content.
At least with Wikipedia, if someone screws up, someone else will probably correct it.