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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The Information Age has created a double-edged sword in relation to the value and accuracy of data readily dispensed to the public. That bias, opinion or outright fabrication can overrule a particular viewpoint leads some people to unwittingly accept erroneous information as being correct. Determining the truthfulness and merit comes from a perspective of inquiry that allows recipients of that information to assure they are getting the truth. No bibliography.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCinfovalue.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
leads some people to unwittingly accept erroneous information as being correct. Determining the truthfulness and merit comes from a perspective of inquiry that allows recipients of that information to
assure they are getting the truth. One way in which to ferret out inaccurate or invaluable information is to apply the basic questions that pertain to its origin: 1) who
wrote the piece and how is he/she qualified to be an expert on the subject; 2) what type of information does the author provide; 3) where did the author obtain
his/her sources; 4) when was the piece written - has new data been discovered that makes this information obsolete; 5) why did the author write this piece - personal agenda
or an impartial impact; 6) how much detail is offered - does it just skim the surface of important factors? The philosophical view encourages people to question everything they hear,
read, see or otherwise have the potential to believe. The mere idea that someone has uttered or written a particular bit of information has little bearing on whether that
data is either accurate or valuable, leaving it solely up to the recipient to probe the possibility of prejudice, embellishment, vagueness or disregard for known facts. However, it is
important to realize that bias can - and does - exist even when an author is both qualified and renowned as in the case of scientific research. The rule
of thumb is to always corroborate facts with other sources to ensure accuracy and value. With the Internet serving as the omnipotent source
of information, people who would otherwise not be able to express their personal views as fact or claim expertise about a particular topic are all too often accepted as credible
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