Can we cite Wikipedia? What if Wikipedia was more reliable than its detractors ?
By: Mohamed El Louadi
Potential Business Impact:
Makes Wikipedia a trustworthy source for school.
Wikipedia, a widely successful encyclopedia recognized in academic circles and used by both students and professors alike, has led educators to question whether it can be cited as an information source, given its widespread use for this very purpose. The dilemma quickly emerged: if Wikipedia has become the go-to information source for so many, why can't it be cited? If consulting and using Wikipedia as a source of information is permitted, why does it become controversial the moment one attempts to cite it? This manuscript examines the systematic rejection of Wikipedia in academic settings, not to argue for its legitimacy as a source, but to demonstrate that its reliability is often underestimated while traditional academic sources enjoy disproportionate credibility, despite their increasingly apparent shortcomings. The central thesis posits that Wikipedia's rejection stems from an outdated epistemological bias that overlooks both the project's verification mechanisms and the structural crises affecting scientific publishing.
Similar Papers
Factual Inconsistencies in Multilingual Wikipedia Tables
Computation and Language
Fixes Wikipedia facts across languages.
Contested Citations: The Role of Open Access Publications in Wikipedia's Scientific Disputes
Digital Libraries
Makes science articles on Wikipedia more debated.
When Collaborative Maintenance Falls Short: The Persistence of Retracted Papers on Wikipedia
Human-Computer Interaction
Fixes Wikipedia's wrong science links.