Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-23 Thread Steve Bennett
On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 12:15 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 The way it was discussed in-project a teritiary source summarizes
 several secondary sources into one cohesive article.

Is a work that summarises/draws on multiple news articles secondary or
tertiary? I wonder, because I've considered writing articles based on
very old newspaper articles (eg, late 1800s). But I realise that it's
actually pretty hard to do, to not take events out of context, etc.
I'd be much better off using a book written by a historian...who has
read the articles. Is that book secondary? Tertiary? Somewhere in
between?

Steve

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-23 Thread Andrew Gray
2009/8/23 Steve Bennett stevag...@gmail.com:
 On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 12:15 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 The way it was discussed in-project a teritiary source summarizes
 several secondary sources into one cohesive article.

 Is a work that summarises/draws on multiple news articles secondary or
 tertiary? I wonder, because I've considered writing articles based on
 very old newspaper articles (eg, late 1800s). But I realise that it's
 actually pretty hard to do, to not take events out of context, etc.
 I'd be much better off using a book written by a historian...who has
 read the articles. Is that book secondary? Tertiary? Somewhere in
 between?

In this context, I think it's safe to say that the contemporary news
articles are primary sources; the book by the historian is a secondary
source; we're synthesising that and some other materials to be a
tertiary source.

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-19 Thread Surreptitiousness
wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I just want to address this one quote.

 You also don't have an article if you have a lot of primary
 and tertiary sources, but very few secondary sources.

 Let's say that you have the tertiary (shudder) source EB 1911, 
 Cleopatra.  You are aware that an enormous number of our articles 
 were created *solely* from the 1911 EB are you not?
   
You seem to be labouring under the misapprehension this is my 
argument, rather than just one argument that I have heard put forwards.  
I'm not going to waste time defending it, since it isn't my argument to 
start with.  You'd be better off looking at [[WP:NOR]] and working out 
how to amend it to reflect what you believe is consensus.  I am well 
aware of the provenance of many of our articles.
 So in conclusion, I don't think we have any policy language that would 
 say that tertiary sources without secondary ones would make an article 
 subject to attack, except possibly a make this better please tag.
   
I kind of like the idea that people will tag an article for clean up 
rather than nominate it for deletion.  It makes me kind of warm and 
fuzzy and nostalgic. The thrust of the argument against tertiary sources 
is this: Third party sources don't provide any evidence of notability 
unless they contain some sort of commentary on their subject matter, 
othewise they are classed as tertiary sources. What's at issue is that 
there are good faith misunderstandings of policy and guidance out there, 
which it seems it is hard to correct. We seem to have created language 
which doesn't solve any problems at all. Look at this fragment from 
WP:NOR: Tertiary sources can be helpful in providing broad summaries of 
topics that involve many primary and secondary sources. Some tertiary 
sources may be more reliable than others That's a tremendous weapon 
to charge any tertiary source not to taste as not as reliable as these 
other ones that I like. Look at this fragment: Deciding whether 
primary, secondary or tertiary sources are more suitable on any given 
occasion is a matter of common sense and good editorial judgment, and 
should be discussed on article talk pages. That leaves the whole issue 
to argument, with no onus on either side to budge from their position.  
We've probably entrenched the idea that it's better to stick to your 
guns than seek compromise. After all, why wouldn;t your opinion be the 
one that is common sense and good judgment.  Who is going to admit 
having bad judgment.  Add to this that arb-com won't touch content 
disputes, and you are left with an atmosphere where both sides try to 
act as nice as possible whilst trying to goad the other party into a 
mistake for which they can get blocked. Is it any wonder disputes can 
fester across Wikipedia?

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-19 Thread Carcharoth
On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 2:21 AM, David Gerarddger...@gmail.com wrote:
 2009/8/19  wjhon...@aol.com:

 Well get busy I still once-in-a-while encounter articles whose only
 source is EB1911.  I would submit that if you actually put these up for
 AfD you'd get a lot of backflack for SNOW.  Sure the articles could be
 fixed, but the previous point was that a single tertiary source isn't
 sufficient for an article and I think it probably is.. depending.


 I remember copyediting one article on a now-obscure 18th century
 British parliamentarian. Basically I just rewrote for style. And,
 y'know, I'm pretty sure it'd be a reasonable start on the article, and
 certainly not a deletion candidate just for having 1911EB as its sole
 source.

The big problem with 1911EB articles used to seed articles is that the
phrases and text used often survive through to later versions, and
when trying to critically assess an article, it is very difficult to
tell which bits were from the 1911EB article, and which bits were
added later (precise footnoting and referencing would help here).
Sometimes a comparison in page history, or with a wikisource page, can
help. Sometimes not.

There is a project that tries to clean these articles up, and lots of guidance.

The guidance:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:1911_Encyclopaedia_Britannica

The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica is out of copyright and can in some
cases be used as a source of material for the English Wikipedia.
However, it is now quite old, and there are many problems with this
material in a modern encyclopedia. Even in 1917 it was seen as an
unreliable source when Willard Huntington Wright published his
scathing Misinforming a Nation, a 200+ page critical examination of
the problems with the encyclopedia. The myth of the EB1911 being the
best and greatest Encyclopedia is a testament to a successful
marketing campaign which usually doesn't hold up under critical
examination.

All those 10 points on that page are good, but how often are they followed?

As a brief aside, I loved Brion's comment on the talk page:

Well, even if the edit histories on the live server get cleared
again, I for one intend to have a century's worth of backups in my
petabyte storage crystal library when the times comes. :) --Brion
03:52 Sep 12, 2002 (UTC)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:1911_Encyclopedia_topics

The only remaining task on Variation and selection is integrating
references, probably to their own authors' pages. That page is still
up for historical interest and to finish small amounts, but for all
intents and purposes, this article is merged. I'm taking it off the
1911 list, and thus declaring the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica to be,
at first draft level, merged into Wikipedia. Ladies, gentlemen, and
algorithms, it's been an honor. Alba 15:24, 27 February 2006 (UTC)

Impressive! How long did that take, I wonder?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Missing_encyclopedic_articles/1911_verification

Please verify that each of the articles is free of such errors, and
has updated coverage, before removing the item from the list. Also, if
the article does derive from the encyclopedia, make sure it has the
{{1911}} tag in its References section. It may be helpful to note on
the article's talk page any significant differences in the
comprehensiveness of our article as compared to the 1911 article.

New guideline June 2008: If the article is in the Wikisource
repository of EB1911, include a {{Wikisource1911Enc}} tag as the first
line of the References section.

Unfortunately: 4.5% complete.

So it looks like it will be slow progress there.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-19 Thread Charles Matthews
Carcharoth wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:1911_Encyclopedia_topics
 The only remaining task on Variation and selection is integrating
 references, probably to their own authors' pages. That page is still
 up for historical interest and to finish small amounts, but for all
 intents and purposes, this article is merged. I'm taking it off the
 1911 list, and thus declaring the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica to be,
 at first draft level, merged into Wikipedia. Ladies, gentlemen, and
 algorithms, it's been an honor. Alba 15:24, 27 February 2006 (UTC)

 Impressive! How long did that take, I wonder?
   
It was of course a grossly overconfident statement. My latest EB1911 
find was [[William Mure (writer)]], all of nine days ago. We have 
learned (I hope) that the dab factor - i.e. false-positive bluelinks in 
your list of articles - is something that has to be made more central to 
the merging effort. Compare the DNB missing articles project and how it 
is set up . (OK, OK, I know I have mentioned this before.)

As for verifying EB1911 text, it can and should be done piecemeal. I 
found a case today where A. F. Pollard, a very respectable historian, 
seemingly made a slip in the DNB that transmitted to the EB1911; and I 
only noticed it by comparison with another DNB article. My 
over-checking theory says:

- Yes, you should try to provide inline references where possible, for 
chunky copy-paste jobs;
- but you should approach this as building up the article with further, 
verifiable facts;
- and what usually happens is that you find errors and inconsistencies 
either because unverifiable facts eventually look like islands in a see 
of footnoted facts, or because the sources for the new facts indicate 
that something strange is going on.

Charles



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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread WJhonson
I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If there 
is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were discussing 
tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries of 
notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide notability, in fact 
perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly, since 
they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!

Will Johnson



In a message dated 8/19/2009 2:16:36 AM Pacific Daylight Time, 
surreptitious.wikiped...@googlemail.com writes:

 The thrust of the argument against tertiary sources 
 is this: Third party sources don't provide any evidence of notability 
 unless they contain some sort of commentary on their subject matter, 
 othewise they are classed as tertiary sources.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-19 Thread David Goodman
Of course I wouldn't put them up for AfD. There is no reason to make
the previous text inaccessible--and conceivably some of it could be
used.  I could do much more rewriting if people put fewer acceptable
(or at least fixable or mergeable)  articles up for unwarranted AfDs,
or did not try to change WP:N policy to justify deleting still more.

Now, I came here to write, but I've ended up doing mainly rescuing.
It's hard to say which should have priority--making existing articles
better, or  getting acceptable new articles.  My choice was rescue
because fewer people were doing that.

A difficulty with the updated EB articles is that people did not
normally indicate just what part was from the EB,  so it is hard to
tell from the face what part is unreliable. (It can of course be told
by looking at the first versions in the history, or by checking the
Wiksource link if present--or one of the other available online texts,
or guessed at by looking for  opinionated prose. )

As for the British parliamentarian, I can't identify him.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:30 PM, Andrew Grayandrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk wrote:
 2009/8/19 David Gerard dger...@gmail.com:
 2009/8/19  wjhon...@aol.com:

 Well get busy I still once-in-a-while encounter articles whose only
 source is EB1911.  I would submit that if you actually put these up for
 AfD you'd get a lot of backflack for SNOW.  Sure the articles could be
 fixed, but the previous point was that a single tertiary source isn't
 sufficient for an article and I think it probably is.. depending.

 I remember copyediting one article on a now-obscure 18th century
 British parliamentarian. Basically I just rewrote for style. And,
 y'know, I'm pretty sure it'd be a reasonable start on the article, and
 certainly not a deletion candidate just for having 1911EB as its sole
 source.

 I've found that a lot of our material tagged as from EB1911 has now
 pretty much vanished entirely under three or four years of editing -
 it might be instructive to dig through them and see what needs
 rewriting anyway.

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Template:1911

 --
 - Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-19 Thread David Gerard
2009/8/19 David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com:

 As for the British parliamentarian, I can't identify him.


This was 2004, I really do not remember :-) If anyone who cares more
than me wants to grovel through my edits from five years ago ...


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread Surreptitiousness
wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If there 
 is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were discussing 
 tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries of 
 notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide notability, in 
 fact 
 perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly, since 
 they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!
   
Keep an eye on notability guidance and content forking policy then, 
because they may get changed at some point to become amenable to this tack.



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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If there 
 is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were discussing 
 tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries of 
 notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide notability, in 
 fact 
 perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly, since 
 they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!

 Will Johnson


   

Out of curiosity... would you class Slashdot and Digg as
tertiary sources ?


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread wjhonson
The way it was discussed in-project a teritiary source summarizes 
several secondary sources into one cohesive article.  Let us first 
set-aside those works calling themselves encyclopedias when they are 
really specialist works that pretend to cover a subject area thoroughly 
which is a different animal altogether.

Examining true encyclopedia articles, we can find an article on say 
Mary, Queen of Scots which itself may cite seven or ten other 
secondary works, as it's basis.  Each of those works may be a few 
hundred pages long, but the enclyclopedia article is only perhaps a 
thousand words.

So a true tertiary work, selects and summarizes (presumably the best) 
multiple-secondary-works per article.  This was the in-project jargon.  
This is not in-general how a tertiary work is necessarily defined 
outside the project.

I'm not familiar with slashdot and digg, but it seems they would, at 
least, not synthesize.  Synthesis is a necessary part, in my mind, to 
the creation of a true encyclopedia article.  All tertiary works are 
encyclopedias.  Not all encyclopedias are tertiary works, since the 
word is bastardized by some.

W.J.



-Original Message-
From: Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Wed, Aug 19, 2009 4:53 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to 
Wikipedians for BBC...










wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If 
there
 is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were 
discussing
 tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries 
of
 notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide 
notability, in
fact
 perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly, 
since
 they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!

 Will Johnson




Out of curiosity... would you class Slashdot and Digg as
tertiary sources ?


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread David Goodman
In any  subject, a tertiary work is almost by definition outdated.
There will necessarily be 4 delays before new work can be recognized:
A, The time to publish the new work, B The time  for the reviewer to
assimilate the new information by  C. The time to write the review
D. The time to publish the review.  In fields where it matters, there
are of course some media that try to shorten these steps, and some
journals (such as Nature) sometimes publish commentary simultaneously
with important papers. But in fields like the humanities, the cycle
will normally take several years.

Therefore there is a danger in relying exclusively upon such works.
We sometimes use them for determining consensus in a field, but
outside as well as inside Wikipedia, consensus can change long before
the generally available texts recognize this.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 10:15 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 The way it was discussed in-project a teritiary source summarizes
 several secondary sources into one cohesive article.  Let us first
 set-aside those works calling themselves encyclopedias when they are
 really specialist works that pretend to cover a subject area thoroughly
 which is a different animal altogether.

 Examining true encyclopedia articles, we can find an article on say
 Mary, Queen of Scots which itself may cite seven or ten other
 secondary works, as it's basis.  Each of those works may be a few
 hundred pages long, but the enclyclopedia article is only perhaps a
 thousand words.

 So a true tertiary work, selects and summarizes (presumably the best)
 multiple-secondary-works per article.  This was the in-project jargon.
 This is not in-general how a tertiary work is necessarily defined
 outside the project.

 I'm not familiar with slashdot and digg, but it seems they would, at
 least, not synthesize.  Synthesis is a necessary part, in my mind, to
 the creation of a true encyclopedia article.  All tertiary works are
 encyclopedias.  Not all encyclopedias are tertiary works, since the
 word is bastardized by some.

 W.J.



 -Original Message-
 From: Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Sent: Wed, Aug 19, 2009 4:53 pm
 Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to
 Wikipedians for BBC...










 wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If
 there
 is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were
 discussing
 tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries
 of
 notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide
 notability, in
 fact
 perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly,
 since
 they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!

 Will Johnson




 Out of curiosity... would you class Slashdot and Digg as
 tertiary sources ?


 Yours,

 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC...

2009-08-19 Thread wjhonson
Well to me, a review is not a tertiary work at all.  Personally I think 
a tertiary work should only be considered those who synthesis multiple 
secondary works in an article on the same subject.  This would be as 
opposed to commentary on a single secondary work as you seem to be 
stating below.


-Original Message-
From: David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Wed, Aug 19, 2009 9:04 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to 
Wikipedians  for BBC...


In any  subject, a tertiary work is almost by definition outdated.
There will necessarily be 4 delays before new work can be recognized:
A, The time to publish the new work, B The time  for the reviewer to
assimilate the new information by  C. The time to write the review
D. The time to publish the review.  In fields where it matters, there
are of course some media that try to shorten these steps, and some
journals (such as Nature) sometimes publish commentary simultaneously
with important papers. But in fields like the humanities, the cycle
will normally take several years.

Therefore there is a danger in relying exclusively upon such works.
We sometimes use them for determining consensus in a field, but
outside as well as inside Wikipedia, consensus can change long before
the generally available texts recognize this.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG

0A

On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 10:15 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 The way it was discussed in-project a teritiary source summarizes
 several secondary sources into one cohesive article.  Let us first
 set-aside those works calling themselves encyclopedias when they are
 really specialist works that pretend to cover a subject area 
thoroughly
 which is a different animal altogether.

 Examining true encyclopedia articles, we can find an article on say
 Mary, Queen of Scots which itself may cite seven or ten other
 secondary works, as it's basis.  Each of those works may be a few
 hundred pages long, but the enclyclopedia article is only perhaps a
 thousand words.

 So a true tertiary work, selects and summarizes (presumably the best)
 multiple-secondary-works per article.  This was the in-project jargon.
 This is not in-general how a tertiary work is necessarily defined
 outside the project.

 I'm not familiar with slashdot and digg, but it seems they would, at
 least, not synthesize.  Synthesis is a necessary part, in my mind, to
 the creation of a true encyclopedia article.  All tertiary works are
 encyclopedias.  Not all encyclopedias are tertiary works, since the
 word is bastardized by some.

 W.J.



 -Original Message-
 From: Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com
 To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Sent: Wed, Aug 19, 2009 4:53 pm
 
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to
 Wikipedians for BBC...










 wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I submit that there is no such language in any of our policies.  If
 there
 is, then whoever wrote it has no clue what we meant when we were
 discussing
 tertiary sources many years ago.  Tertiary sources are just summaries
 of
 notable secondary sources.  So they quite obviously provide
 notability, in
 fact
 perhaps the ultimate form of it, trouncing secondaries quite roundly,
 since
 they in-fact pick the most notable topics to report out of those!

 Will Johnson




 Out of curiosity... would you class Slashdot and Digg as
 tertiary sources ?


 Yours,

 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread Surreptitiousness
wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I believe tantamount not to rules can be broken but rather to rules can 
 change.  I never advise people to be bold *against* policy, but rather 
 to go to the policy discussion pages and see whether or not their 
 situation might be an exception that we'd like to include *in* the 
 policy.
   
I agree, although I think it depends upon the case.  It all depends upon 
which policy you are talking about.
 By the way, I dispute that notability guidelines were laid down to 
 prevent advertising, spam and original research.  For example I think 
 in the Porn Actors notability it states something like that they must 
 have appeared in at least five films or something of that sort.
   
Yes, but the driving impetus was to stop vanity pages and advertising, 
if you look back at the discussions regarding drafting the porn 
guidance, you'll see advertising was a concern for those 
participating.The trouble with gaining consensus on anything for fiction 
is that there are people who won't even allow a bar like has to have 
appeared in five works of fiction.  I've just had to point out to 
someone that their whole argument, which was based upon the fact that 
subject specific notability guidance couldn't extend or provide an 
alternative route to notability beyond that in the main notability 
guidance, actually contradicted the notability guidance itself, which 
emphatically states the opposite.  I'm also concerned with a potential 
rewrite of the intro to our notability guidance being discussed on the 
talk page, because it looks like it might remove these subject specific 
routes.  We're kind of losing sight of the argument that we don't have 
to think of Wikipedia as paper, and that each article is a different 
page and a different entry.  We've kind of lost sight of the argument 
that because we aren't paper, our articles can be seen as sections of 
one large article. So like you say, or at least I'm assuming you're 
saying, our porn star coverage is allowed to go to as deep as possible 
to ensure our coverage is as broad, wide and encompassing. That means 
saying five films is enough, to sate the desire of those who become 
immersed in the field. (It's kind of hard to avoid double entendres with 
this subject)
 You can certainly create a list of porn actors who have only appeared 
 in a single film *without* doing any original research.  Remembering 
 that source-based research is not original just because it's new to 
 a major publication.  Original research involves the *creation* of a 
 new fact, not just the re-reporting of it no matter the source, 
 provided it's been published in some format previously.  A video box 
 cover is a publication format.  So reading names off it, is not 
 original research.
   
I'm aware of the arguments.  The big flaw in the argument you are 
pushing is that our policies, especially no original research, call for 
articles to rely mainly on published reliable secondary sources.  That's 
been in policy in some form or another for ages, I think it is one of 
Larry Sanger's additions to the rule book.  It's currently coming into 
play in a number of places. So yes, fine, you can read stuff of a dvd 
box, but the argument is, if that's all you have, then you don't have an 
article.  You also don't have an article if you have a lot of primary 
and tertiary sources, but very few secondary sources.  I think the 
trouble is that very early on you'd have people interested in science 
subjects writing policies over here, and people interested in fiction 
subjects writing policies over there, and conflict has ensued when 
people discovered the other set of policies and started applying them 
to the wrong subject, if you see what I mean.  And original research 
is really hard to apply to fiction, because a lot of it surprisingly 
does amount to interpretation. Now yes, we should let consensus 
determine content, but is that a consensus as defined in policy or by 
editors?  And then we fall into arguments over what a local consensus 
is. Surprisingly few people appreciate the argument that a consensus 
enshrined in a policy can be just as localised as any other.  I can 
never tell if that's small mindedness or political ignorance. I also 
find people are too busy arguing at article a in order to protect or 
advance positions at articles b, c and d. It would be so much 
easier if there was some way of just debating the merits of article a. 
Alternatively, I find the people I think of as my peers are increasingly 
avoiding debates and just editing the encyclopedia.  I kind of 
appreciate and understand that.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread wjhonson
I just want to address this one quote.

You also don't have an article if you have a lot of primary
and tertiary sources, but very few secondary sources.

I think this is a false reading of our intent.
The entire structuring of the rely primarily on secondary sources and 
other discussion that primary sources can be included *when* the 
material was already introduced by a secondary source in some way and 
especially in those cases where it conflicts, etc etc.

Doesn't really address and wasn't meant to address a situation where 
all you have is a teritary source (an expression I hate by the way).  
But let's play ball with it anyway.

Let's say that you have the tertiary (shudder) source EB 1911, 
Cleopatra.  You are aware that an enormous number of our articles 
were created *solely* from the 1911 EB are you not?

You might say that makes them stubby but not in the normal sense of the 
WP:Jargon.  We might say they rely on a single source but really the 
EB sort of sits above most uses of that condition.  I would say that 
most of us consider is fairly authoritative on a summary view of any 
subject.

So in conclusion, I don't think we have any policy language that would 
say that tertiary sources without secondary ones would make an article 
subject to attack, except possibly a make this better please tag.

Will Johnson




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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread David Goodman
Not that it's a single source. The problem is that it's a single
outmoded source, never really balanced and NPOV, and by now wholly
unreliable in almost all subjects, the ancient world included. About
95% of it was written over a century ago, and there is almost nothing
for which new information and new interpretations have made the
existing version inappropriate as the base for a modern encyclopedia.
Essentially all text from there needs to be removed, except for some
quotations to show how things were looked at historically,  and the
relevant portions or articles redone from what would now be considered
reliable sources. To even know what parts can be rescued requires a
sound knowledge of the subject  and its development, and cannot be
done mechanically. The situation is exactly comparable to what it
would be if that EB had simply reprinted Diderot's 1770 Encyclopedie.
It would have been a laughing stock to have presented that as a
current work, and so with our articles derived from it.



David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 7:30 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I just want to address this one quote.

 You also don't have an article if you have a lot of primary
 and tertiary sources, but very few secondary sources.

 I think this is a false reading of our intent.
 The entire structuring of the rely primarily on secondary sources and
 other discussion that primary sources can be included *when* the
 material was already introduced by a secondary source in some way and
 especially in those cases where it conflicts, etc etc.

 Doesn't really address and wasn't meant to address a situation where
 all you have is a teritary source (an expression I hate by the way).
 But let's play ball with it anyway.

 Let's say that you have the tertiary (shudder) source EB 1911,
 Cleopatra.  You are aware that an enormous number of our articles
 were created *solely* from the 1911 EB are you not?

 You might say that makes them stubby but not in the normal sense of the
 WP:Jargon.  We might say they rely on a single source but really the
 EB sort of sits above most uses of that condition.  I would say that
 most of us consider is fairly authoritative on a summary view of any
 subject.

 So in conclusion, I don't think we have any policy language that would
 say that tertiary sources without secondary ones would make an article
 subject to attack, except possibly a make this better please tag.

 Will Johnson




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 WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread wjhonson
Well get busy I still once-in-a-while encounter articles whose only 
source is EB1911.  I would submit that if you actually put these up for 
AfD you'd get a lot of backflack for SNOW.  Sure the articles could be 
fixed, but the previous point was that a single tertiary source isn't 
sufficient for an article and I think it probably is.. depending.

I suppose someone could make a robot run through these, but my point is 
that even if your single source is Compton's 2009 edition, I wouldn't 
say that calls for the deletion of the article.  Provided of course 
it's not a straight copyvio.




-Original Message-
From: David Goodman dgoodma...@gmail.com
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Tue, Aug 18, 2009 6:11 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to 
Wikipedians  for BBC Documentary


Not that it's a single source. The problem is that it's a single
outmoded source, never really balanced and NPOV, and by now wholly
unreliable in almost all subjects, the ancient world included. About
95% of it was written over a century ago, and there is almost nothing
for which new information and new interpretations have made the
existing version inappropriate as the base for a modern encyclopedia.
Essentially all text from there needs to be removed, except for some
quotations to show how things were looked at historically,  and the
relevant portions or articles redone from what wou
ld now be considered
reliable sources. To even know what parts can be rescued requires a
sound knowledge of the subject  and its development, and cannot be
done mechanically. The situation is exactly comparable to what it
would be if that EB had simply reprinted Diderot's 1770 Encyclopedie.
It would have been a laughing stock to have presented that as a
current work, and so with our articles derived from it.



David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 7:30 PM, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 I just want to address this one quote.

 You also don't have an article if you have a lot of primary
 and tertiary sources, but very few secondary sources.

 I think this is a false reading of our intent.
 The entire structuring of the rely primarily on secondary sources 
and
 other discussion that primary sources can be included *when* the
 material was already introduced by a secondary source in some way and
 especially in those cases where it conflicts, etc etc.

 Doesn't really address and wasn't meant to address a situation where
 all you have is a teritary source (an expression I hate by the way).
 But let's play ball with it anyway.

 Let's say that you have the tertiary (shudder) source EB 1911,
 Cleopatra.  You are aware that an enormous number of our articles
 were created *solely* from the 1911 EB are you not?

 Yo
u might say that makes them stubby but not in the normal sense of 
the
 WP:Jargon.  We might say they rely on a single source but really the
 EB sort of sits above most uses of that condition.  I would say that
 most of us consider is fairly authoritative on a summary view of any
 subject.

 So in conclusion, I don't think we have any policy language that would
 say that tertiary sources without secondary ones would make an article
 subject to attack, except possibly a make this better please tag.

 Will Johnson




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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread David Gerard
2009/8/19  wjhon...@aol.com:

 Well get busy I still once-in-a-while encounter articles whose only
 source is EB1911.  I would submit that if you actually put these up for
 AfD you'd get a lot of backflack for SNOW.  Sure the articles could be
 fixed, but the previous point was that a single tertiary source isn't
 sufficient for an article and I think it probably is.. depending.


I remember copyediting one article on a now-obscure 18th century
British parliamentarian. Basically I just rewrote for style. And,
y'know, I'm pretty sure it'd be a reasonable start on the article, and
certainly not a deletion candidate just for having 1911EB as its sole
source.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Policies, notability et al, was Request to Wikipedians for BBC Documentary

2009-08-18 Thread Andrew Gray
2009/8/19 David Gerard dger...@gmail.com:
 2009/8/19  wjhon...@aol.com:

 Well get busy I still once-in-a-while encounter articles whose only
 source is EB1911.  I would submit that if you actually put these up for
 AfD you'd get a lot of backflack for SNOW.  Sure the articles could be
 fixed, but the previous point was that a single tertiary source isn't
 sufficient for an article and I think it probably is.. depending.

 I remember copyediting one article on a now-obscure 18th century
 British parliamentarian. Basically I just rewrote for style. And,
 y'know, I'm pretty sure it'd be a reasonable start on the article, and
 certainly not a deletion candidate just for having 1911EB as its sole
 source.

I've found that a lot of our material tagged as from EB1911 has now
pretty much vanished entirely under three or four years of editing -
it might be instructive to dig through them and see what needs
rewriting anyway.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Template:1911

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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