On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 4:23 PM, Ting Chen wing.philopp@gmx.de wrote:
What I wonder is, is there a meaning to write an encyclopedia with this language. Who would look for Olympic Games in a classical chinese Wikipedia, except the people who write the article themselves?
Usually, the most of Internet users who read English without problems won't use any other edition of Wikipedia for such purposes (current events), except the English one. Those who are not fluent in any foreign language and don't have such happiness to be born in some large culture (German, French, Russian, Spanish, Chinese...), would read about current events on professional media in their languages, not on Wikipedia. So, then, why to write encyclopedia in any other language?
But, article about Han or Qin dynasty and their times in Classical Chinese may be very useful for a lot of East Asians. AFAIK, one average Japanese is not able to read even Traditional Chinese (my friend told me that he is able just to suppose what some character means; so mistakes like reading a character for "dentist" as a "physician" is usual level of understanding), while, as Aphaia said, is able to read Classical Chinese. I may imagine that the similar situation is in Korea and maybe in some countries of South-East Asia.
The point here is that a number of non-linguists are trying to make some tautologies from linguistics; which is completely impossible. There are a number of social variables which makes one language valuable. And there are a number of other social variable which makes one language worth of efforts to help them.
BTW, note that a lot of languages with small number of speakers are not able to write an article about, let's say, nuclear chemistry. And more languages are not able to express almost anything about computer technology in their standards; and if they are able, it is usually better to read it in English because texts in standards are more foreign than English text is.
There is a very small specter of languages which, AFAIK, shouldn't have separate projects: stupidities (cf. Siberian Wikipedia), hobbyist languages (Klingon, Tengvar) and ancient languages used exclusively for research of language and cultural history (Sumerian, Phoenician). Other languages should pass careful analysis: are they useful? do they deserve needed amount of our time and energy? Also, some Wikimedia projects are more useful for some languages: Wiktionary and Wikisource, are, by default, much more useful for any language than it is, let's say, Wikinews. So, even ancient languages should get their Wiktionaries and Wikisources; but I really don't see a need for Old Church Slavonic Wikinews (while even Wikiversities may have some sense).
And to conclude: We need some more sensible rules. (And, so, I fully agree with Tim's changes.)