Knowledge (XXG)

:Combining sources - Knowledge (XXG)

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being covered, and so will use technical terms without explaining them. In such cases it can be good practice to define the term based on a second source. Similarly, an advanced source might use a common phrase in a context that might confuse the lay reader. To illustrate, consider a case when we want to add to our article on
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When abundant source material is available, where the information can be neatly and encyclopaedically summarized in a different form than the way its presented in the sources, then it is not original research to do so, as long as you are not inventing any new information or misrepresenting the source
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Invariably, articles will quite rightly draw from more than one source. So some forms of synthesis are allowed. It can be legitimate for a single compound statement to be supported by more than one source, even in cases where the complete statement is not a rephrasing of information found in a single
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When an article contains a strong statement about the world, it is often desirable to support it with a top tier source from a recognised expert writing in a leading Journal or book published by a reputable university press. Often such sources assume the reader has a basic grounding in the subject
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At the same time there may be cases when an interpretation may only seem trivial. A notable case, which involved much debate in Knowledge (XXG), is combining data from various statistical tables. The main caution is that different source may use different criteria in creating tables; they may not
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Sometimes multiple sources provide a fuller picture when taken together, such as when source A points out the reaction to a particular event in one country while source B covers the reaction to the same event in a second country. Sometimes it will be good encyclopaedic writing to combine the
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The most controversial form of capital control has been the flight tax – a measure where governments confiscate a proportion of an individual's or company's money if they choose to move it out of the country.
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The definition of flight tax might be sourced to a standard economics text book or alternatively the sentence could even remain cited just to source A as the definition could be viewed as common knowledge.
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trams, some sources called them "SM53", others called them "Høka". They are the same thing. Recognizing that fact, and deciding to use both sources for the article can be a good editing decision.
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It is not always original research for an editor to make a judgment that different names used in different sources refer to the same topic. When an editor wrote the article on
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refers to a tax for travelling by air. So the sentence we add to our article might include a definition from introductory source B making it clear what
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the following information from advanced source A: "Flight taxes have attracted more opposition than any other form of capital control."
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This page is about combining facts from multiple sources. For combining multiple source citations for the same fact, see
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Trivially simple interpretations. These are usually so non-controversial that they are no more original research than
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cycle and seek a policy-based consensus on the Talk page about whether or not the specific combination violates
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is intended to prevent editors from inserting their own opinions into articles. Our articles should be based on
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This page provides additional information about concepts in the page(s) it supplements. This page is not one of
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until someone published such a list with Obama on it; that idea was soundly rejected.
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If met with objections about combining certain sources, an editor should follow the
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means in this context. So the actual statement we add to our article might read:
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and policy-based community consensus supersede any Knowledge (XXG) essay like
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is not allowed on Knowledge (XXG), but there is no prohibition against
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individual source. Doing so can help editors avoid the appearance of
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Explanatory essay about the Knowledge (XXG):No original research page
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always be compatible, so that the combined table may be misleading.
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Examples using multiple sources to support a single statement
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information from the two sources into a single sentence.
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without implying any conclusions derived from improper
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material. Some time back, it was argued that we were
652: 636: 581: 530: 482: 449: 396: 360: 312: 181:Recognising when two sources are on the same topic 107:while also improving the quality of our articles. 139: 290: 228:Knowledge (XXG)'s No Original Research policy 116:Combining an advanced and introductory source 8: 128:A bright but non expert reader might assume 297: 283: 275: 246:Handling conflicts between this essay and 193:Decisions on the organization of material 172:Combining sources to offer a broader view 230:was designed to prevent. To summarize: 87:Knowledge (XXG)'s policy stance against 50:Knowledge (XXG)'s policies or guidelines 208:List of presidents of the United States 558:Converting between references formats 7: 41:Knowledge (XXG):No original research 573:Guidance on source reviewing at FAC 512:Referencing without using templates 507:Referencing with citation templates 683:Knowledge (XXG) supplemental pages 54:thoroughly vetted by the community 14: 688:Knowledge (XXG) basic information 264:Knowledge (XXG) policies such as 214:Trivially simple interpretations 141: 26: 563:Reference display customization 1: 330:Biographies of living persons 568:References and page numbers 502:Introduction to referencing 306:Knowledge (XXG) referencing 709: 517:Referencing dos and don'ts 61: 15: 662:Parenthetical referencing 497:Citations quick reference 464:Punctuation and footnotes 416:Citation Style Vancouver 693:Knowledge (XXG) sources 644:Knowledge (XXG) Library 313:Policies and guidelines 582:Template documentation 522:Citing Knowledge (XXG) 153: 18:Help:Citation merging 352:Scientific citations 325:No original research 220:routine calculations 469:Shortened footnotes 52:as it has not been 484:Help for beginners 436:Citation templates 388:Referencing styles 670: 669: 474:Nesting footnotes 378:Combining sources 232:original research 161:possibly Source B 89:original research 82: 81: 37:explanatory essay 700: 629: 623: 618: 612: 607: 601: 596: 590: 538:Cite link labels 451:Inline citations 441:Reflist template 411:Citation Style 2 406:Citation Style 1 335:Reliable sources 299: 292: 285: 276: 163: 148: 145: 144: 93:reliable sources 74: 30: 29: 23: 708: 707: 703: 702: 701: 699: 698: 697: 673: 672: 671: 666: 648: 632: 627: 621: 616: 610: 605: 599: 594: 588: 577: 526: 478: 445: 392: 383:Offline sources 368:Citation needed 356: 308: 303: 251: 216: 202:allowed to add 195: 183: 174: 165: 155: 146: 142: 123:Capital control 118: 113: 85: 78: 77: 70: 66: 58: 57: 27: 21: 12: 11: 5: 706: 704: 696: 695: 690: 685: 675: 674: 668: 667: 665: 664: 658: 656: 650: 649: 647: 646: 640: 638: 634: 633: 631: 630: 619: 608: 597: 585: 583: 579: 578: 576: 575: 570: 565: 560: 555: 550: 545: 543:Citation tools 540: 534: 532: 528: 527: 525: 524: 519: 514: 509: 504: 499: 494: 492:Reference-tags 488: 486: 480: 479: 477: 476: 471: 466: 461: 455: 453: 447: 446: 444: 443: 438: 433: 428: 423: 418: 413: 408: 402: 400: 398:Citing sources 394: 393: 391: 390: 385: 380: 375: 370: 364: 362: 361:General advice 358: 357: 355: 354: 349: 347:Citing sources 344: 343: 342: 332: 327: 322: 316: 314: 310: 309: 304: 302: 301: 294: 287: 279: 250: 244: 215: 212: 194: 191: 182: 179: 173: 170: 138: 117: 114: 112: 109: 83: 80: 79: 76: 75: 67: 62: 59: 47: 46: 33: 31: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 705: 694: 691: 689: 686: 684: 681: 680: 678: 663: 660: 659: 657: 655: 651: 645: 642: 641: 639: 635: 626: 620: 615: 609: 604: 598: 593: 587: 586: 584: 580: 574: 571: 569: 566: 564: 561: 559: 556: 554: 553:Cite messages 551: 549: 546: 544: 541: 539: 536: 535: 533: 531:Advanced help 529: 523: 520: 518: 515: 513: 510: 508: 505: 503: 500: 498: 495: 493: 490: 489: 487: 485: 481: 475: 472: 470: 467: 465: 462: 460: 457: 456: 454: 452: 448: 442: 439: 437: 434: 432: 429: 427: 424: 422: 419: 417: 414: 412: 409: 407: 404: 403: 401: 399: 395: 389: 386: 384: 381: 379: 376: 374: 371: 369: 366: 365: 363: 359: 353: 350: 348: 345: 341: 338: 337: 336: 333: 331: 328: 326: 323: 321: 320:Verifiability 318: 317: 315: 311: 307: 300: 295: 293: 288: 286: 281: 280: 277: 273: 271: 267: 262: 260: 256: 249: 245: 243: 239: 237: 233: 229: 225: 221: 213: 211: 209: 205: 201: 192: 190: 188: 180: 178: 171: 169: 164: 162: 158: 152: 151: 137: 135: 131: 126: 124: 115: 110: 108: 106: 100: 98: 94: 90: 73: 69: 68: 65: 60: 55: 51: 44: 42: 38: 32: 25: 24: 19: 377: 373:Find sources 263: 252: 240: 235: 231: 223: 222:. To source 217: 204:Barack Obama 199: 196: 184: 175: 166: 160: 156: 154: 149: 140: 133: 129: 127: 119: 101: 86: 34: 548:Cite errors 35:This is an 677:Categories 654:Deprecated 270:WP:COMBINE 134:flight tax 130:flight tax 105:plagiarism 72:WP:COMBINE 39:about the 592:Edit refs 459:Footnotes 97:synthesis 625:Refstart 426:Bluebook 340:Medicine 236:research 157:Source A 64:Shortcut 614:Refref2 206:to the 603:Refref 431:Comics 266:WP:NOR 255:WP:BRD 248:WP:NOR 637:Tools 259:WP:OR 187:SM53 159:, + 43:page 421:LSA 200:not 679:: 628:}} 622:{{ 617:}} 611:{{ 606:}} 600:{{ 595:}} 589:{{ 272:. 238:. 99:. 45:. 298:e 291:t 284:v 147:Y 56:. 20:.

Index

Help:Citation merging
explanatory essay
Knowledge (XXG):No original research
Knowledge (XXG)'s policies or guidelines
thoroughly vetted by the community
Shortcut
WP:COMBINE
original research
reliable sources
synthesis
plagiarism
Capital control
SM53
Barack Obama
List of presidents of the United States
routine calculations
Knowledge (XXG)'s No Original Research policy
WP:NOR
WP:BRD
WP:OR
WP:NOR
WP:COMBINE
v
t
e
Knowledge (XXG) referencing
Verifiability
No original research
Biographies of living persons
Reliable sources

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