Sean Barret wrote,
Silly statements that are so very hard to spot that they cannot be rebutted and can only be corrected by rendering them unexpressible are not silly. They may be wrong, but they are not speedy-obliteration candidates.
I am very worried that we are seriously discussing the formation of a committee empowered to prohibit unpopular content from Wikipedia and to ban those that feel that it is important to record it.
This is not a constructive comment. I am sure everyone else understood I was using a hyperbolic example just to make the point. Anyone who has done serious research in the social sciences or humanities (and this certainly doesn't require a PhD.) can recognize inaccurate assertions that people who have not done serious research probably will not recognize. This is a fact; no one would dispute that someone who has seriously researched physics can tell the difference between a good or bad explanation of the Uncertainty Principle, or the theory of Special Relativity. The same goes for articles on history, politics, culture, and so on.
Moreover, no one has mentioned "unpopular" content and Sean is just waving a red herring to distract us from a serious problem. In one of my own messages -- here or at the project page -- I pointed out that one use of such a committee is to ensure that the content is being presented in an NPOV way, or to ensure that the sources are properly represented. Anyone can assert something and cite a book. But in some cases readers need to know whether the author of that book was published by a university press, a trade press, or a vanity press, or whether the book was written by someone with a PhD. in Biblical Studies or Geology. You might think that disputes revolving around such questions would be easy to resolve, and of course, in many cases, they are. But sometimes they are not, and there is a need for some mechanism to arbitrate content.
Finally, Brian reminds me that I must repeat that Wikipedia is first and foremost an encyclopedia. In an encyclopedia, accuracy is of the utmost important. Brian should not put in inaccurate content, and then protest its deletion because it is "unpopular."
Steve
Steven L. Rubenstein Associate Professor Department of Sociology and Anthropology Bentley Annex Ohio University Athens, Ohio 45701