Citations don't guarantee Trustworthiness
This is a topic that Iāve been thinking about for a while, but I decided to finally write about it because Iāve grown a bit annoyed.
Explanation
Generally, nowadays, citing sources is seen as something you just kinda have to do if youāre making any sort of claim.
The general perception is that if youāre not citing your sources, you canāt be trusted, because thereās no way to verify whether the claim is true or not without a source.
That, however, is fallacious thinking. I donāt know exactly which informal fallacy is at play, but itās definitely the case. I think the closest would be the Appeal to Authority.
The citation itself does not mean that the claim being made is true or not. All it signals is that there is a āsourceā for where the information came from. Whether itās true or not cannot be determined from the citation alone.
Itās here that the fallacious thinking comes in: you are assuming that the information is true just because a source is provided.
Keep in mind that you arenāt checking the source, you just see the little number and assume it must be true.
The reason this is inherently flawed thinking is because any number of things could āgo wrongā with the statement being made and the citation being sourced:
- The person might have misinterpreted the information.
- Say the original source said
āMost people dislike pears, but like apples.ā
This could be misinterpreted asāMany people like apples and others dislike pears.ā
The original āsourceā is implying that the same group of people who dislike pears likes apples, while the claim being made from it is suggesting these are separate groups.
- They may be cherry-picking information.
āOn average, smoking is harmful to the people around them. Though it can have a small positive effect for the smoker.ā
āāSmoking can have a small positive effect for the smoker.ā
This takes the good and leaves out the bad.
- They may outright lie.
āThere were a number of buildings in the area and now there are just a handful.ā
āāThere was a church and itās still there.ā
There are probably more issues, but I just canāt think of them.
The presence of the citation doesnāt make it more reliable, it just makes it slightly easier to check the claim against the source claim.
But now Iād like to point out that the idea that you canāt verify a claim without a citation is strange if you stop to think about it.
Why not?
Why canāt you?
If I say that the population of cats is proportional to humans at 5:1 and, thus, there are too many catsā¦is my claim impossible to disprove without a citation?
Of course not.
Citations provide only two very specific upsides that donāt make claims with citations inherently more trustworthy:
- They make it easier for the researcher to keep track of where they found information and to consequently recall it.
- They make it easier for readers to track the flow of information.
The second one is relevant to the reliability of a claim, but it doesnāt guarantee it. And, again, itās generally not useful for the majority of people.
Iāll also point out something from experience: academics also tend to not cite sources. Iāve been to several lectures and seen and read a bunch of presentations from academics. Granted, I study in the humanities, so itās not like Iām doing STEM. However, Iāve never seen academics cite sources at all.
This has resulted in the quirky situation where if I see someone claim to be an academic onlineā¦and they donāt cite sourcesā¦Iām more inclined to believe them.
Iād also recommend reading this essay by Thorsten Renk. He goes over the āCitation Gameā himself, though I think I approached it from a different angle.
What I think is notable is that, according to Renk, authors donāt have the luxury of not citing sources for not being relevant. I wonāt spoil the rest, because if youāre one of the people who trusts blindly, you should learn to read.
Citations & Here
Now Iāll move onto a thematically related but not directly relevant topic: what about me citing sources on this personal wiki?
Well, generally, I donāt see an issue with not citing sources here. This is partially because what it is Iām talking about is primarily Media. Itās not exactly rocket science or medicine.
The other reason is that I want to, but not strongly enough to wrestle with the inherent limitations of Dokuwiki. Even with the RefNotes plugin, keeping track of sources and creating citations is a lot more difficult than is even reasonable.
The other reason I donāt see it as a big deal is that I use my own wiki to keep track of information for myself. Thus, it needs to be as reliable as I need it to be for my own purposes. If it were unreliable, I couldnāt use it.
The other other reason is because of the reasoning I laid out above. The lack of citations doesnāt mean itās impossible to verify whether Iām right or wrong, it just means you donāt know exactly where I got the information. Which puts us in the same boat, because I often forget where I get my information as well.
That gets us into the topic of me wanting to cite stuff. As I stated above, Dokuwiki is not very pleasant for this kind of activity (and neither is something like Word, frankly), but the bigger issue for me is that I want to remember where I got information (see the 1st reason why theyāre useful).
So I will at some point as part of my effort to also get good at research, but I make no guarantees.
Thatās it for now. I may edit this further in the future.