On Dec 27, 2007 10:53 AM, Nathan nawrich@gmail.com wrote:
At least one good criteria for deciding whether a particular Wikipedia is justified would be the existence of a community of native speakers (community interpreted expansively). Dead language 'pedias don't seem to serve the purpose of preservation of knowledge and access to it. Is there a Latin or Aramaic Wikipedia? We should treat tiny languages with no native speakers in the same manner.
The number of native speakers is a useful criterion. I would think that things like historical prevalence, longevity, and the amount of primary material available in that language might also be relevant (with due account for languages without a significant written tradition).
Aramaic and Latin both have present speaking populations, the former more so than the latter. Both have been widely spoken historically, and have been in existence for substantial lengths of time (multiple millenia each). There are mountains of writings available in each language.
On small languages, it should be remembered that the Wikimedia projects have the potential to save some small languages. There are hundreds of languages under threat right around the globe (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_endangered_languages) many of which will soon be lost as the last remaining native speakers die out. I think the seriousness of this situation drives a good slice of the prejudice against wikis for conlangs with a dozen or two speakers that are stuffed full of bot translations.