Yes, truth

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Wikipedia is not a place to Right Great Wrongs. Sometimes reliable sources get things wrong, and the encyclopedia has to follow suit. The Wikpedia process is not about what's true, only what is verifiable. That being said, present the truth when you can.

The first pillar of Wikipedia is that Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. The purpose of an encyclopedia is to summarize knowledge. The measure of how well Wikipedia fulfills its purpose is the accuracy of its knowledge. Truth matters. The foundational Editing Policy encourages editors to:

The best information can sometimes be in technically unreliable sources. Often though, there's nothing standing in your way. If policy allows you to tell a truth or a lie, there is no good reason to choose the lie.

Editorial judgement

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Editors should not be fatalistic about automatically repeating whatever is in a source. There is room for editors to exercise choice. Editorial judgement is part of the reliable sourcing process. It would be impossible for Wikipedia to function otherwise, especially in the common circumstance where sources disagree. Editors should not just repeat claims, but explain topics in an organized, informative way.

On Talk pages

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There is room for truth-seeking on Talk pages. Talk pages can be used to discuss inconsistencies in the sources. Original research and synthesis policies do not apply to Talk pages. However, since Wikipedia is not a forum, the discussion must eventually tend towards some concrete improvement to the article.

Giving due weight

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Regardless of what the truth may be, Wikipedia must present all prominent viewpoints with an impartial tone. If there is a particular point of view you believe is true, take care not to cherry-pick only your view, since that could give undue weight. Instead, consider all of the best sources and extract all the significant claims. Throughout that process, give each point of view its strongest argument in favor. Do this properly and the result cannot be undue; you will have built the standard against which due and undue are judged.

See also

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