On 19/12/06, charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com wrote:
Sarah wrote
The problem is that material we use as sources must be available to the general public, and it's not clear that we can expect the public to have access to a legal database.
This is rather objectionable, as a type of argument. 'Available' to the 'general public' contains two very negotiable ideas. Few academic sources (in proportion to the total) are easily available to many (in proportion to the 6 billion total) of the world's inhabitants. Making a fuss about this is a sure route to a worse encyclopedia. I'd much prefer people (a) to take on board the general principle that acceptable sources are tied to the topic and level of coverage, and (b) to cross some of these bridges as and when they come to them, when there is some real reason to query material.
Indeed. Just because there is a grey area does NOT mean there is somehow an overriding need to resolve it into black and white at all cost to good sense.
- d.