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Mak wrote:
I've just attempted to explain why having inline
citations can be
misleading. If a fact is widely agreed on, and you ascribe it to a single
source or author, it makes it seem as though that person is the sole
proponent of that idea, when in fact pretty much everyone in the field is in
agreement.
If you look at [[Dido and Aeneas]] you will see that it does cite it's
sources. In the oh-so-cryptically named "References" section. It does not
have inline citations because when I wrote the majority of the article, I
was 1) brand new 2) inline citations had not become all the rage 3) *it
doesn't contain controversial assertions. No one has challenged a single
fact in the article. If you know anything about either the work or Purcell
or English Baroque music, you probably won't challenge any of the article's
assertions because they are *not* controversial.
Would it be all that hard to provide a specific page reference as a
footnote. e.g. (hypothetical example) <ref>See, for example, J. Doe
/Origins of Somethingorother/ p.29, J. Bloggs /Somethingorother
explained p.60</ref>.</ref>? And there is no need to cite a source after
every fact - after every paragraph or subtopic would be fine. But no
citations is unlikely to result in a successful GA review, at least
unless/until the proposed changes to the GA criteria are accepted.
Cynical
David Russell
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