No, it would not be my error. It would be Wiki's error, which is why I said, "Also, you have to be careful relying too much on Wikipedia.[/I]
We
all do ....
The quote you cited was from Wiki,
That would be correct:
it was a quote of a sentence in a Wikipedia article, which appears to have been written by a Wikipedia editor.
but THEY cited it from the Olympic PDF file, and referenced it directly as footnote #23, which you also provided in your post.
Not exactly a correct characterization - if you believe it to be an citing of a (altered)
quote from the Olympic PDF.
They referenced to the Olympic PDF file as the
source of the data ... yes, that is true.
However, if you look at the sentence, you will see that it is not enclosed in quotes in the Wiki article
(some sentences, or portions of sentences, are)
You can, in fact, find both types of sentences and/or text (quote-marked and non quote-marked) in the article which we are now discussing.
But the text they used does not appear anywhere in the PDF document.
Of course not -
they weren't quoting text from the PDF.
There are parts of articles on Wikipedia where
direct quotations of material contained in source references are used. I believe these are generally enclosed in quotation marks ...
There are also parts of articles where the editor has written, in his own words, a statement which is based on source reference materials. You yourself are undoubtedly highly familiar with this practice on a personal basis, as am I.
The text was changed, where they added "participating continents", which is something that's not supposed to be done when doing a direct footnoted reference on Wiki.
The text was not "changed" ..... because it was not lifted from the source reference material - it was simply something that one or more Wiki editors constructed in their own words, using the source reference material as the basis for what they stated in their own words.
which is something that's not supposed to be done when doing a direct footnoted reference on Wiki.
If you would care to cite a link where this is so stated, so I and others can read it for ourselves, I for one, would be quite happy to do so. Perhaps others would as well.
In the meantime, while you're digging that up just keep in mind the 5th Pillar
RLENT said:
Riddle me this:
Given the above, which 5 continents do you believe are being referring to ..... if the five include all continents from which participants came ?
Easy... Australia, Europe, Asia, Africa and America.
Correct - you win a cookie.
But that doesn't mean Baron Pierre de Coubertin was right in combining the two Americas into one.
However, that was largely the prevailing thought of most Europeans at the time, so I can't fault him on that one.
Ahh yes ....
rightness ....
being right .... interesting subject in terms of the human animal ....
You know who first came up with the idea for the five rings and gave it to de Coubertin?
Sauron, the Dark Lord ?
.... oh wait ... that was a different story ....
and a different number of rings ....
Some dood named Carl Jung. Now you and Dr Jung have something in common.
Well, like I always say:
Better Jung than the Dark Lord ...