[WikiEN-l] [roy_q_royce at hotmail.com: --A Request RE a WIKIArticle--]
Ray Saintonge
saintonge at telus.net
Tue Sep 30 23:31:52 UTC 2003
Daniel Ehrenberg wrote:
>Maybe we should make a section about crackpot theories
>on relativity. After all, there are so many of them
>and their existance is well-known. It wouldn't need to
>name specific points that they are making, only that
>crackpot theories exist. Possibly there could be an
>article on crackpot theories. We don't have to endorce
>them to acknowledge them. (Or do we, under NPOV?)
>
The term "crackpot" should really be avoided, because of the attitude
that it carries. I prefer "eccentric" as more reflective of the fact
that these ideas are away from the center of physical thought.
A list of these theories is certainly valuable, but there would be room
there ton go into much detail. I support allowing each of them to have
an article where the proponent has virtually free reign to explain his
ideas. Opponents of the theories should learn to apply some restraint,
and to note that it will suffice for the purpose of NPOV to make a note
at the end of the article saying something like, "The ideas in this
article are disputed by the mainstream of scientific thought." The more
outrageous and ridiculous you consider a theory to be, the less you
should say about it. Engaging in a discussion on the merits of such a
theory gives it an air of credibility that it might never otherwise have
had.
I also think that the criterion of requiring that something has been
previously published is not entirely sound, because that opens up a big
question about what it means to have been published. So when it comes
to having one article of reasonable length on a subject I would give
these proponents the benefit of the doubt. Beyond that I would be more
cautious.
If I may make a somewhat irreverent analogy: A zoo needs to keep its
wild animals in cages where they can be seen.
Some interesting ideas in the history of science and technology have
been forgotten when better more efficient ideas came along, It is
perfectly encyclopedic to record these despite the fact that they mostly
got nowhere. We have no honest way of determining which of today's
theories will bear future fruit.
As Napoleon is reported to have said when he met Robert Fulton: "What,
Sir? Would you make a ship sail against the wind and currentsby lighting
a bonfireunder her deck? I pray you excuse me. I have no time to listen
to such nonsense."
Ec
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