Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog

News and views about philosophy, the academic profession, academic freedom, intellectual culture, and other topics. The world’s most popular philosophy blog, since 2003.

  1. Peter's avatar

    Why not publish open access? Are university presses such an important tool to generate money?

  2. Rollo Burgess's avatar

    My general rule is that any book involving extensive mathematical or logical notation should be read in hard copy. Digital…

  3. historygrrrl's avatar

    I’ve had to deal with a few of these HTML e-books from OUP. Aside from the usual annoyances, I have…

  4. Elise Marlowe's avatar

    Just to share a personal observation on the state of academic freedom in mainland China: I spent seven years in…

  5. Mike O'Brien's avatar

    (Not an academic, but I read a lot of PDFs of current philosophy publications). Besides the big-picture concerns (like undermining…

  6. Jc Beall's avatar

    I’ve nothing to add except to reaffirm that Volker is right. It’s a mess, and likely to get messier. What…

  7. Jason Leddington's avatar

    Despite the inconvenience, this makes a lot of sense to me. Thousands of recently published philosophy books can be found…

545 Law Review Articles Cite Wikipedia!

So reports Blog Emperor Caron.  He, discreetly, does not list the names of the authors of these articles, all of whom should presumably be blacklisted from scholarly careers (unless, of course, the citation was in the context of, "Wikipedia reflects the popular prejudice that…" or "Wikipedia records this error as though it were fact, proving yet again the unreliability of the Internet…" or "In this instance, actual scholarly sources confirm what Wikipedia reports…").

UPDATE:   A timely example, involving the philosopher David Chalmers at the Australian National University, one of the world’s leading authorities on philosophical and psychological work about consciousness, trying to correct some errors regarding the Wikipedia entry on the subject.

AND ANOTHER:  One academic department has (quite correctly, I think) barred its students from citing to Wikipedia in their submitted work.  (Thanks to Dean Rowan for the pointer.)

ONE MORE:  Mary Dudziak (USC) brings us Steve Colbert’s take on Wikipedia, which sums it all up:  "the Encyclopedia where you can be an expert even if you don’t know what the hell you’re talking about."  Kind of sounds like Cyberspace and the blogosphere more generally, doesn’t it?

One response to “545 Law Review Articles Cite Wikipedia!”

  1. When Is It Appropriate to Cite to Wikipedia?

    Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia that anybody can edit, is frequently getting cited by courts and academics. The New York Times reports: A simple search of published court decisions shows that Wikipedia is frequently cited by judges around the countr…

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