Comixed 

 

« Previous | Next »


No Original Research

Incorrect source or offensive?
  • Share on Facebook
  • Copy & paste this:

» See all 41 comments

  1. Ido Deisuke says:

    FIRST!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111

  2. Chaos says:

    Heh, this one was a good one. Wikipedia is really bad with that.

    • BAReFOOt says:

      Agreed. Wikipedia could by definition never be more than a propaganda machine of a few. Because of the single fact that there is one set of people which are “more equal than the others” (and because they are not you).
      People disagree. Unless you logically connect those views to the most basic paradigms (like quantum physics and relativity theory), nobody can prove shìt to be true. Hence every truly educated person knows that in practice there is no such thing as an absolute truth! That is perhaps the only one global truth possible to prove.
      So get over it and accept it, cause it won’t go away. :)

      But on Wikipedia, they use “citations” as a trick, to lie to you and act as if it were an “actual fact”. Giving something more value, because someone “respected” says it ,is a well-known logical fallacy called “(argumentum) ad populum” ((appeal) to the people). (On which Wikipedia has a big article too.) Except that in reality, it’s even worse to say “This dude told me that…X” as to say “I say that… X”. But that exact “original research” is soomehow “forbidden” on Wikipedia. I guess because Wikinazi admins could neither grasp nor blindly delete something made from hard and proper logic, and hence not freely twist it their way.

      Wikipedia and Conservapedia actually have pretty much the same behavior. Just a different spin. But they both sell it as “teh one global trut0rz!!!1!1one”.

      The funniest thing I noticed, is that I often trust Encyclopedia Dramatica more than any of the above. At least with ED, I they don’t try to conceal that it’s nothing more than their very own p.o.v. that they write down. They just speak it out without barriers. Like a drunk person.
      It’s just way more honest. And the better you know someone’s position, the better you can tune your distortion correction filter. The more useful something becomes.

      • Ido Deisuke says:

        Yea yea yadda yadda yadda keep whining cause you tried to push pov and they kicked your sorry ass.

      • Jonn says:

        But what are your thoughts on Yaoi?

      • Ditchdigger says:

        My sentiments exactly. I was reading the article for the Radium Girls, and it talks about how that case basically established the right for employees to sue their employers for lax safety standards. Later in the article there was a line that said this improved workplace safety and it had a a [citation needed] after it, and I thought “Isn’t that basically common knowledge? F this, I’m pulling out the big guns — I’m going to make a Comixed.” And so here we are. :)

      • Missy says:

        tl;dr

      • Benji says:

        Fail.

        I’ll begin with this: Wikipedia aims to be an encyclopedia. Original research goes in the peer-reviewed literature.

        You seem to be accusing Wikipedia of an appeal to authority, which is only a problem when the authority is not qualified to speak on the subject. Proper citation is perfectly acceptable.

        You then go on to call quantum mechanics and relativity basic paradigms, which is odd since they are, themselves, scientific theories. That you mention them side-by-side as the first step in any proof is confusing, since the two are inconsistent, and moreso since scientific theories are unprovable.

        Your claim that there is, in practice, no absolute truth is correct, at least as far as science is concerned. Science does not prove anything. No scientific theory is ever proven, no matter how many observations support it. It cannot be proven that the Earth orbits the sun, nor atomic nuclei carry a positive charge, nor that humans evolved from ancestral apes. No educated person would deny any of these claims given the evidence currently available, but they would be wrong to claim they had been proven.

        Giving something more value because someone respected said it is not an argumentum ad populum: it’s a potential appeal to authority. Appealing to a knowledgeable authority is allowable, particularly when that knowledgeable authority is writing a paper in a peer-reviewed journal and has evidence to back them up.

        It is quite funny that you trust Encyclopedia Dramatica more than Wikipedia. Of course, you’re always guaranteed to get the best information when there are no measures in place to attempt to ensure the accuracy of that information.

        Wikipedia may be flawed, but not for the reasons you think. You need to educate yourself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

      • jashk says:

        its a fanboy wikia with alot about pronstar and fitional charas.

  3. Chmielok says:

    Lol, Copernicus did it.

  4. bertbad says:

    Just the other day some girl said octopuses don’t live in the jungle. I was like, duh? But neither of us could find such a citation.

    • MacFall says:

      I have, as of yet, been unable to find a citation that proves Wikipedia exists.

    • Sarah says:

      What? What do you expect me to say when you spout “It’s the law of the jungle” in reference to Paul being eaten by soccer players?

      • bertbad says:

        Oh, I agree with you now. I know you are speaking the truth. I’m just saying that I did not find anywhere that cited specifically that octopuses did not live in the jungle. But it is a given that they live in the sea and the sea is not in the jungle.

  5. MacFall says:

    This is brilliant.

  6. ShadowMasta says:

    This is Galileo? Lol… Nicolas Copernicus find that Earth orbit Sun, not Galileo!

    • MacFall says:

      You’re right. Galileo should have said that he empirically proved that the Earth orbits the Sun, which is what he did.

      • PsychoDad says:

        Akshully, if you accept Einsteinian relativity, it is no more accurate to say that the Earth orbits the Sun than the converse. Even if the heliocentric model is simpler and explainable by modern physics, esp. gravitational, theory, that alone does not disprove the medieval description of a geocentric universe with bodies orbiting Earth in epicycles — if a plausible theory explaining epicycles were published, heliocentrism would have some ‘splainin’ to do.

        • A sapient raccoon says:

          However, if you made a geocentric model you would have a hard time drawing the orbits of the other planets around Earth. The orbits of the outer planets would change direction every time the Earth passed them in its orbit.

        • Benji says:

          It would be no more accurate to say that the Earth orbits the Sun than the converse if the Earth had anywhere near the mass of the Sun.

          What general relativity tells us is that orbits (which do happen) are caused by the curvature of spacetime by the presence of matter and energy, rather than a force as Newton had claimed.

          If a plausible theory explaining epicycles were published, heliocentrism would merely have to show that it doesn’t happen in our solar system on the scale that is required to fit the orbit of the planets into the geocentric model. Heliocentrism does not rest solely on its explanation of retrograde motion. It can be further shown by the fact that we’ve sent craft into space to map our solar system, and in every case the planets have been exactly where we’d expect in a heliocentric model, and in every case the pictures we’ve received back agree with the heliocentric model.

  7. bitbot says:

    Um…anyway, great comic.
    Way above average.

  8. A sapient raccoon says:

    I wish I could add citation needed tags to other websites, and maybe also “logical fallacy” tags. There are so many times when I read something that site owner clearly pulled out of their ass, and I’d like to point out those errors to people with no critical thinking skills.

  9. Rod123 says:

    1.- Copernicus created the heliocentric theory

    2.- Galileus was well connected with the clergy and was given a chance to prove his theories, he instead chose to ridicule the clergy including his benefactors instead of actually trying to prove his theory.

    3.- If you are going to steal other’s people’s work and then be unable to scientifically defend them, you deserve nothing, Galileus was mainly publicized because he was a big name and because he had to face the clergy.

    4.- So citation needed.


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s