If it's by an accredited scholar and/or published by a peer-reviewed academic press, that's the safest bet.https://twitter.com/Chuck_Morgan3/status/1116691894271193088 …
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Replying to @KevinMKruse
Really? Peer review has NO bias? And only someone "published" is credible!? Wrong! This is NOT the best advice AT ALL. So I am a systems engineer w/o a degree in history or published but I teach thru Liberty Project our founding. I'm not worthy?
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Replying to @BIASPUNDIT
The question was about how to evaluate books and articles, which yes, are usually published.
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Replying to @KevinMKruse
So, wouldn't a more proper response be; "look to [direct sourcing] for their materials?" If they are citing US history, look to those that lived an wrote 1st hand? Like Washington's writing abt his Sentinel's trying to pull a coup on him? Versus a 2nd or 3rd hand cite?
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Replying to @BIASPUNDIT @KevinMKruse
Historians use multitudes of sources to build up complicated interpretations. Sometimes primary sources are more credible. Sometimes they aren't. Depends on the source and the context. There are plenty of self-serving first-hand accounts that are not credible, as you'd expect.
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Replying to @wellerstein @KevinMKruse
I agree, if the 1st source is a liar, like Trump, then you have to use additional sources to buttress your writing. But again, I would still use Trump as my 1st & primary source then use 2nd sources to prove my point of his lies. Or, just use Trump's dbl talk. Still at 1st src.
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Replying to @BIASPUNDIT @KevinMKruse
Historians literally train for years to learn how to balance the voices of many sources, to triangulate claims, to figure out what one ought to believe. It's not as easy as someone being a liar. There are a million ways individual people can be wrong, mistaken, misremember, etc.
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Replying to @wellerstein @KevinMKruse
I was using a simplification for limited space. You lost me at the term "triangulate". Far too political word for me and raises a red flag to your opinion. The res I agree. Some history take more investigation. But most credible is seeking 1st src.
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Replying to @BIASPUNDIT @KevinMKruse
"Triangulate" is a mathematical term, not a political one. "Most credible is seeking 1st src" is wrong. Sorry. Most credible is looking at the big picture, which includes, but is not limited to, primary sources. More credible is talking to many experts who do this for a living.
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Replying to @wellerstein @KevinMKruse
I know but it sends red flags up for me cause I don't see the application for writing. To me that's lingo a leftist uses (not accusing) just being honest.
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OK, for a "bias pundit" you seem to have some ridiculous biases yourself. If you can't actually talk to an expert without objecting to totally standard technical language, then what are the odds you're going to be able to actually ferret out bias? Seriously.
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