Citations in the Book
- Joseph_ngaruiya
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Re: Citations in the Book
> djr6090 wrote:
> > B00kN1nja wrote:
> > > I really wish this book had included some source citations, even just
> > > simple footnotes for some of the information.
> >
> > Could the author have assumed that noone would question his opinion, since he is
> an
> > MD?
>
> Not necessarily. I think there is a limit to what you can put in the book. I think if
> the author would have given all the things in total detail it would be a huge sized
> book. And personally I would not have then read a 1000 page book about remedies for
> stress. A short book with the necessary things is effective. Citations would have
> been therefore a welcome addition for those who want to know more about the topic.
I fully concur with this one. I think citations are a matter of relevance and intention. And since this book is not a science project, I believe the way it was presented is sufficient to meet the author's goal. So many of the remedies given are straight forward.
- mpsmaster
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- Samantha Gayle
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> I agree with you. It would lend credibility to their research. More
> importantly, it would have offered people that really wanted to explore
> some of the topics, treatments, etc more sources to go to. My frustration
> was that it would mention a method very generally, have no citations, and
> offer no other books or sources to support. I don’t mind doing my own
> research, but for some it may seem like too much effort.
I agree with this. It can get quite taxing if you are curious about a lot of things in the book, which I was. Moreover, sometimes I wish I could read an alternate phrasing of a certain method – although the authors are quite clear, it would have been nice to know any other tips the wider community has found to make the method more effective.
- AntonelaMaria
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- jardenjarden
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- Sonya Nicolaidis
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- Howlan
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> That's right. Citation has a way of upholding a book. It shows adequate
> research was involved. It also gives room for referring back, and reading
> up a lot.
It certainly is a big help for curious minds and people who are suffering from stress and want to know much a more about the topic Absence of these definitely reduces the effectiveness of this book.
- Howlan
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> Howlan wrote:
> > djr6090 wrote:
> > > B00kN1nja wrote:
> > > > I really wish this book had included some source citations, even just
> > > > simple footnotes for some of the information.
> > >
> > > Could the author have assumed that noone would question his opinion, since
> he is
> > an
> > > MD?
> >
> > Not necessarily. I think there is a limit to what you can put in the book. I
> think if
> > the author would have given all the things in total detail it would be a huge
> sized
> > book. And personally I would not have then read a 1000 page book about remedies
> for
> > stress. A short book with the necessary things is effective. Citations would
> have
> > been therefore a welcome addition for those who want to know more about the
> topic.
>
> I fully concur with this one. I think citations are a matter of relevance and
> intention. And since this book is not a science project, I believe the way it was
> presented is sufficient to meet the author's goal. So many of the remedies given are
> straight forward.
Yes, a huge and heavy book about natural remedies is really the last to read on muy kind. Considering the practical nature of this book, it is much easier to read and acts as a suitable handbook. So the addition of citations in footnotes would have made the book more efficient.
- Howlan
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> I agree with you. It would lend credibility to their research. More
> importantly, it would have offered people that really wanted to explore
> some of the topics, treatments, etc more sources to go to. My frustration
> was that it would mention a method very generally, have no citations, and
> offer no other books or sources to support. I don’t mind doing my own
> research, but for some it may seem like too much effort.
Yes, not everyone wants to research about all topics here but for those who want to understand a few concepts better, a citation would have made their research the more easier and spare him the mess of filtering thousand webpages. It would help the reader a lot and is a definite mention.
- Howlan
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> I agree, citations do give a certain degree of confidence to the literature
> and room for further research, especially for anyone not completely sold on
> the ideas. However, the book is still effective and authentic.
Yes, however, the presence of citations would have made this book much more effective and the definite go-to handbook for problems related to stress as many books are there that deal with stress and anxiety but the addition of citations would have made this book a notch higher to the other books out there.
- Arite Seki
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