RationalWiki:Ebook citations

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When making citations, it's always good to include primary sources. That's why we have various forms of bibliographic citations. But there are times we can go one better -- many older books are widely available on the Web, free for download, and it would be remiss of us to cite a title when we can link to the actual text. Here, then, is a list of places where we can find such primary sources and other reference material:

  • Project Gutenberg and affiliates -- The original Gutenberg is the Methuselah of ebook archives, created in 1971 long before the personal computer was anything like a reality. Many classics, including Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations and Charles Darwin's Origin of Species, are available here for no charge.
  • TalkOrigins.org, a spinoff of the Usenet talk.origins newsgroup and one of the most definitive references on evolutionary biology and origins of the universe out there. If they don't have an article on it, they'll have an article telling you where to find it.
  • The CIA World Factbook, one of the most definitive geography and national statistics databases out there, published by one of the most powerful and least trusted governmental intelligence agencies in the world.
  • Bartleby.com, specializing in reference material (often more recent material licensed from the publishers) and public domain literature.
  • http://www.etext.org
  • http://books.google.com
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