strategy) Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2004 11:52:54 -0800 User-Agent: KMail/1.5.3 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline Message-Id: 200401091152.54223.maveric149@yahoo.com Status: RO X-Status: Q X-KMail-EncryptionState: X-KMail-SignatureState:
Poor Edmund wrote:
... Some other respected contributors, recognizing the difficulty they have writing neutrally on subjects they feel passionately about, avoid those topics altogether. Daniel Mayer (Maveric) sets the best example I'm aware of, in this respect.
NOTE: I'm speaking in generalities here (meaning I'm not alluding to the current conflict between RK and Danny et al.)
Thanks for the compliment. :-) However, I happen to be interested in many different things, so changing direction away from my own POV landmine fields is easier for me than I suspect it is for many people (who may be primarily interested in contributing to areas they may not be able to easily write neutrally on). I also edit and add content to relax, believe it or not. Edit wars in which the content I add is reverted into a page's history is not what I would call relaxing.
The two best things I've found to help me avoid partisan fighting at Wikipedia are:
- Summarize the POV of my "opponent" /TO HIS SATISFACTION/ !!!
This is often difficult, but can also be fun so long you are not too close the subject. I like your advice of editing slowly and reacting deliberatively when editing articles whose topics are close to you.
Big changes to articles on hot topics often result in some sort of conflict.
- If one of my contributions is reverted (even once), take
this as a signal that I'm NOT DOING AN ADEQUATE JOB of reflecting POVs other than my own.
This is true, to an extent. Sometimes the other person is not reasonable and in fact doesn't want an NPOV article, but one that pushes a certain POV (and this can even be on a subconscience level where the other person can't even see their own POV as POV but instead view their POV as fact).
So sometimes forcing edit warriors to slow down is what is needed. It is near impossible to write toward NPOV during an edit war because emotions get in the way and cloud people's judgment.
-- Daniel Mayer (aka mav)