VanderMey, Randall et al. (2011). Comp, p. 183 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt: "Bare assertion. The most basic way to distort an issue is to deny that it exists. This fallacy claims, 'That's just how it is.' "
Poliziano, Angelo. (2010). Angelo Poliziano's Lamia: Text, Translation, and Introductory Studies, p. 26 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "In Cicero's De natura deorum, as well as in other sources, the phrase “Ipse dixit” pointed to the notion that Pythagoras's disciples would use that short phrase as justification for adopting a position: if the master had said it, it was enough for them and there was no need to argue further."
Burton, George Ward. (1909). Burton's book on California and its sunlit skies of glory, p. 27 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "But by the time of Bacon, students had fallen into the habit of accepting Aristotle as an infallible guide, and when a dispute arose the appeal was not to fact, but to Aristotle's theory, and the phrase, Ipse dixit, ended all dispute."
Bentham, Jeremy. (1834). Deontology; or, The science of morality, Vol. 1, p. 323 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "ipsedixitism ... comes down to us from an antique and high authority, —-it is the principle recognised (so Cicero informs us) by the disciples of Pythagoras. Ipse (he, the master, Pythagoras), ipse dixit, — he has said it; the master has said that it is so; therefore, say the disciples of the illustrious sage, therefore so it is."
Bentham, Jeremy. (1838). Works of Jeremy Bentham, p. 192 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "... it is not a mere ipse dixit that will warrant us to give credit for utility to institutions, in which not the least trace of utility is discernible."
VanderMey, Randall et al. (2011). Comp, p. 183 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt: "Bare assertion. The most basic way to distort an issue is to deny that it exists. This fallacy claims, 'That's just how it is.' "
Poliziano, Angelo. (2010). Angelo Poliziano's Lamia: Text, Translation, and Introductory Studies, p. 26 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "In Cicero's De natura deorum, as well as in other sources, the phrase “Ipse dixit” pointed to the notion that Pythagoras's disciples would use that short phrase as justification for adopting a position: if the master had said it, it was enough for them and there was no need to argue further."
Burton, George Ward. (1909). Burton's book on California and its sunlit skies of glory, p. 27 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "But by the time of Bacon, students had fallen into the habit of accepting Aristotle as an infallible guide, and when a dispute arose the appeal was not to fact, but to Aristotle's theory, and the phrase, Ipse dixit, ended all dispute."
Bentham, Jeremy. (1834). Deontology; or, The science of morality, Vol. 1, p. 323 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "ipsedixitism ... comes down to us from an antique and high authority, —-it is the principle recognised (so Cicero informs us) by the disciples of Pythagoras. Ipse (he, the master, Pythagoras), ipse dixit, — he has said it; the master has said that it is so; therefore, say the disciples of the illustrious sage, therefore so it is."
Bentham, Jeremy. (1838). Works of Jeremy Bentham, p. 192 28 Haziran 2014 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.; excerpt, "... it is not a mere ipse dixit that will warrant us to give credit for utility to institutions, in which not the least trace of utility is discernible."