User:Warren Schudy/Neutrality notes: Difference between revisions
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== Proposed solution(s) == | == Proposed solution(s) == | ||
None of these are actual changes in policy, but rather suggestions that I think would be helpful as official, guiding suggestions. | |||
===One === | ===One === | ||
First, an idea on how to reduce useless arguments on talk pages. If meat-space people negotiated contracts in the same way as Wiki users negotiate article wording, someone would write a contract, the other party would change it, and then they'd start philosophizing violently about contracts and forget about the task at hand of agreeing on one. In reality, negotiation of contracts is guided in large part by the parties making proposals and counter-proposals that hopefully converge to a compromise. I think wiki disagreements could benefit from a | First, an idea on how to reduce useless arguments on talk pages. If meat-space people negotiated contracts in the same way as Wiki users negotiate article wording, someone would write a contract, the other party would change it, and then they'd start philosophizing violently about contracts and forget about the task at hand of agreeing on one. In reality, negotiation of contracts is guided in large part by the parties making proposals and counter-proposals that hopefully converge to a compromise. I think wiki disagreements could benefit from a suggestion that parties to a dispute accompany most talk page posts with a proposal for the article text. This would focus the parties on the task at hand. | ||
===Two=== | ===Two=== | ||
Consider a neutrality dispute where person A insists on paragraph X and person B insists on paragraph Y. One compromise is to simply say "A says X and B says Y", which is factual but not readable (and violates self-promotion policy). Nonetheless, "A says X and B says Y" might be a good starting point for negotiation; instead of worrying about which of "X" or "Y" is neutral, worry about how to make "A says X and B says Y" readable, again guided by proposal and counter-proposals. | |||
===Three=== | ===Three=== | ||
Some people, such as myself, have a habit of bringing up neutrality issues on articles as they are being developed. Keeping an article balanced as it is being written is awkward, and many of these arguments become moot as the article develops, so insisting on strict neutrality of drafts is probably counterproductive. Therefore I propose: | |||
* Discourage people from discussing nit-pick neutrality issues in the early stages of an article's development. If an issue comes up anyway, encourage people to just ignore the issue, leave the article as is, continue writing the article, and come back to it later. | |||
* Encourage people to put the following template at the top of in-progress articles that don't seem neutral: | |||
::: ''This article is under development. The parts that have been written so far may not be a balanced and neutral presentation of the subject.'' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
The | |||
== Other proposals of mine == | == Other proposals of mine == |
Revision as of 15:14, 10 January 2008
Interesting discussions on neutrality and edit warring in forums
- Introduction of Dispute Watch, a policy that attempted to concentrate arguments on specific textual items: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1117.0.html
- Why dispute watch failed, and discussion of banning troublesome authors: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1122.0.html
- Editors that left CZ for these sorts of reasons: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1459.msg13082.html#msg13082
- My preliminary proposal:
http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1462.msg13111.html#msg13111
- Some more comments by Russell Potter: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,990.0.html
Excerpts from Larry
Larry wrote:
people lose thread of what the issue is
Larry also wrote (same post):
Often, I've observed (but only once in these exhibits), the move from "Some people disagree with p, therefore we should not say that p without qualification," to debating the merits of p itself. But look, this is silly. We could simply have a rule against it. If p as a general claim is actually contentious enough that people want to argue about it on CZ talk pages, that means that the article will not actually state either p or not-p, because to do so would be contrary to our Neutrality Policy.
Larry wrote (later in that thread):
the desire to be right, and plain old rudeness.
More Larry:
I am toying with the general concept of making three rules, namely, (1) always to state a clear topic of discussion, (2) the topic should concern the wording of the article, and (3) only argue about that topic--never the topic itself.
Robert King, suggesting that troublesome authors be asked to write an essay as punishment:
Actually, I was totally serious when I suggested this. I think it is a very fitting "punishment" (although it's not really a punishment per se), and I believe forces the person to look at the issue objectively; think of it as a lesson in critical thinking.
My interpretation of the neutrality policy
When writing an encyclopedia, there's a tension between readability and neutrality. One could make a repository of human knowledge that consists of sourced quotes only with no organization, which would be very neutral but unreadable. Therefore, when something is uncontroversial, one can
Proposed solution(s)
None of these are actual changes in policy, but rather suggestions that I think would be helpful as official, guiding suggestions.
One
First, an idea on how to reduce useless arguments on talk pages. If meat-space people negotiated contracts in the same way as Wiki users negotiate article wording, someone would write a contract, the other party would change it, and then they'd start philosophizing violently about contracts and forget about the task at hand of agreeing on one. In reality, negotiation of contracts is guided in large part by the parties making proposals and counter-proposals that hopefully converge to a compromise. I think wiki disagreements could benefit from a suggestion that parties to a dispute accompany most talk page posts with a proposal for the article text. This would focus the parties on the task at hand.
Two
Consider a neutrality dispute where person A insists on paragraph X and person B insists on paragraph Y. One compromise is to simply say "A says X and B says Y", which is factual but not readable (and violates self-promotion policy). Nonetheless, "A says X and B says Y" might be a good starting point for negotiation; instead of worrying about which of "X" or "Y" is neutral, worry about how to make "A says X and B says Y" readable, again guided by proposal and counter-proposals.
Three
Some people, such as myself, have a habit of bringing up neutrality issues on articles as they are being developed. Keeping an article balanced as it is being written is awkward, and many of these arguments become moot as the article develops, so insisting on strict neutrality of drafts is probably counterproductive. Therefore I propose:
- Discourage people from discussing nit-pick neutrality issues in the early stages of an article's development. If an issue comes up anyway, encourage people to just ignore the issue, leave the article as is, continue writing the article, and come back to it later.
- Encourage people to put the following template at the top of in-progress articles that don't seem neutral:
- This article is under development. The parts that have been written so far may not be a balanced and neutral presentation of the subject.
Other proposals of mine
(These don't particularly fit with the rest of this page, but I'd like to remember these somewhere, and here seems like a decent place.)
- Anonymous edits: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1399.msg12315.html#msg12315 and http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1421.msg12865.html#msg12865
- Treating Wikipedians Civily: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1454.msg13031.html#msg13031
- If CZ approved article exists, use it, otherwise use WP: http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1461.msg13101.html#msg13101