Talk:Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition/Archive 1
- Moved from first revision of BritannicaPublicDomain
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As I understand it, Project Gutenberg has published what they call the "Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia". What this actually is, is the classic 11th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. However, because Britannica is a trademark, even though the text is now public domain (because it is so old), they were unable to call it "Encyclopaedia Britannica".
Call it what you will, it is available, and we should consider putting the entire text here, in the Wikipedia. This may be a lot of work (like my own pet project, which is cutting and pasting all of the public domain CIA World Factbook over in Countries of the world -- please help me!), but it sure would be a fun thing to have in here. People could start updating/replacing the articles with Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia as the foundation.
Also, I bet there are a lot of instances where the text of the article could be wikified by cramming words together.
-- Jimbo Wales
Whoa, WhatACoincidence. I just now was downloading vol#1 from it and seeing what it'd take to put it in. :-)
The license says it's in the public domain and we can do whatever we please with it...
I will volunteer to work on chopping out all of the articles from volume 1 and posting them in the appropriate
places. Other than really basic stuff, I'm not going to fiddle with the formatting nor update any inaccuracies
contained in them, so anyone seeing things to change, correct, or update should lay into it.
The two MAJOR concerns I have in doing this is a¤ the information may be WAY out of date in some cases, maybe even
to the point of uselessness, and b¤ the articles may be too long for the average wikitizen to get into - they may
feel too intimidated by the length and tone of the article to add or correct as we'll need.
But, I guess we'll never know unless we try, so here goes... ;-)
-- BryceHarrington
I would suggest adding "PG" or "EB" or "11" at the end of the name of any page that is taken from EB© Then we could edit versions of that, while the original is preserved© -- Larry Sanger
It appears that only the first volume of this encyclopedia was entered into PG...
It occurs to me that if people are interested in the original, then they can always just
go to the project gutenberg site, and then be certain they're getting the straight stuff.
Or they can trust my cut-and-paste skill and look at revision 0...
I think our purpose in using that material is just as a starting point for our own
encyclopedia... Thus I think it'd be better if I just plugged them right into the
topics, without putting 'EB' on the topicname. So we'd have just one copy of each
article, plus any commentary placed on top of them by subsequent editing. Does that
sound okay?
-- BryceHarrington
Sounds alright -- WojPob
In looking it over, there's two rules we'll have to follow. First, we cannot use the
name "Britannica" because that is a trademark. Second, Project Gutenberg requires that
NO mention is made of Project Gutenberg if the text is altered from what they supply.
We are free to copy and reuse the text, and edit it as we wish, but can't claim it is
from Encyclopaedia Britannica nor from Project Gutenberg. Weird, eh? Anyway... Correct
me if I've misinterpreted the various bits of small text. -- BryceHarrington
I didn't get all of the articles entered, but here's the ones I did get to:
AaRiver
Abensberg (Germany)
Aberdeen (Scotland)
Aberdeen (South Dakota)
George Hamilton Gordon Aberdeen
-- BryceHarrington
Where can I find the 11th edition for download? I've banged around on the EB site and can't find it. I'd like to start updating and adding the articles. Thanks.
It's not on the Britannica site. Hard to find via google too.
ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/gutenberg/etext95
Look for pge*, etext #200, Jan 1995.
For this material to be truly useful, it needs to be marked as from Brittanica
of that edition, and NO EDITTING ALLOWED! Otherwise, it's useless.
On a related note, without being able to cite references, and without
examining references other people have cited, the usefulness of material
here is limited to, well, relatively useless stuff. Is there a way to
mark up citations automatically? Or am I missing the point somewhere?
I couldn't disagree more. The text of these articles is ours--it belongs to us, the public. We can and should use it in every way that could possibly benefit our project. If that means copying some things verbatim (An article on the history of the letter "A" certainly shouldn't need much updating), then we can do that. If that means completely ignoring some articles that are too hopelessly out of date or out of context, then we should do that. But I think there's a vast area in between where we can take the information from these articles and write our own in more modern language and with other updates and additions. No credit is necessary, as "authorship" is not a relevant concept here. We might also use even the out-of-date texts as examples of outdated historical ideas. We should certainly use things like illustrations and tables. It's a great source, and while I agree that the text in Wikipedia should be written by live humans in our modern context, those people should take advantage of this source in whatever way they feel appropriate. --LDC
---
LDC: Thanks, nice explanation. A moments reflection of what I wrote previously
bears qualifying, namely how I measure usefulness for myself. I completely
agree about lack of credit (thus anonymity suits me well for anything I write
here).
The first volume can be found here
http://sailor.gutenberg.org/etext95/pge0112.txt
Is there a e-text of the other volumes?
A script could be used to wikify the text.
Thanks, I've downloaded it but I don't expect to be adding any of it for awhile. I would like to know about the other volumes too (though I don't expect to finish 'A through ANDROPHAGI' for quite awhile--it unzips to an 8 MB text file.)
I could not find any other volumes other than 'A'; I guess whomever started putting it into Gutenberg must have given up after the first volume. Also, I don't know if *all* of the entries ought to be placed in Wikipedia; many of them are irrelevant to say the least. I'd encourage picking and choosing; people can always go back to the original Gutenberg text if they *must* know that the vice-bishop of cambrishire from 1889-1894 was an avid collector of moths and wrote sonnets about the Holy Ghost. ;-)
This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
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