Slightly off the topic,
Bee Folks,
Among other classes, I have been teaching “Research Methods” classes at
the university level, and discover how the Internet contributes to *mis-
and dis –information* while trying to *help* the information-seekers,
reminding me that “The road to hell is, indeed, paved with favors.”
Although ever-increasing numbers of web sites, especially those affiliated
with research universities and government-funded institutes, are credible,
I QUESTION many other sources that claim this expertise or that
authority.
For example, I would not accept everything that’s been said even in this
thread in blind faith. Type, for instance, *Canola oil* in Google.com and
see the plethora of *scientific data* that loudmouth the harmful
ingredients in it, let alone the blatant jingoism that insists “Canada”
+ “Oil” should be banned. A Joe Sixpack who happens to own a website can
CLAIM that he SAW, flesh and blood, Elvis in a Shawnee garage, and an
Elvis fan can quote this in his *research* paper in an extreme case. Is
there any one lately abducted by a UFO? Any gynecological examination?
I tend to believe, first, latest books, articles and papers, in that
order, and finally a few good web sites.
Simply put, if you are somebody in your area of concentration, you will
present papers in national/international conferences, and when people in
your area find your articles cogent, then you may be able to publish in a
book form. This whole process is so arduous, especially since an
*original* idea is really hard to come by these days, that not many can
write a decent article, let alone books. Of course, I did not mention
those *researches* where a private sector pours in money to bake a cake
and eat it, too. Let us tread this thread light-footed.
FWIW
Hum
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