The Cunctator wrote:
Readers in
different languages will have somewhat different
backgrounds and interests. Different backgrounds mean that we must
take into account different assumptions on what the reader will
already be familiar with. Different interests mean that we must take
into account different emphasis on what the reader will expect to
learn from an article.
I'm not convinced that we should have as a goal that the articles
reflect the biases of the readership. I would expect both entries on the
Statue of Liberty to tell the complete story. I have trouble seeing this
as anything other than a defense of provincialism.
Well, I didn't mean "biases". Perhaps my example is not so good.
Suppose you were writing an introductory article on Macintosh OS X for
an audience of Windows users, and another introductory article for
audience of Linux users. The two audiences will naturally have
different backgrounds and interests, and so each article will
naturally take that into account, even if the two articles cover much
of the same ground.
If NPOV is the same, then we shouldn't have as a
goal articles which
reflect different biases.
Yes, I do agree with this, but I think that there can be differences
between article versions, even where both are NPOV.
--Jimbo