NPOV and credibility (was Re: [WikiEN-l] Original research)
Shane King
shakes at dontletsstart.com
Mon Dec 13 01:06:35 UTC 2004
Jimmy (Jimbo) Wales wrote:
> Not "more popular" -- "in proportion to their representation among
> experts on the subject, or among the concerned parties" -- credibility
> is an inherent part of this judgment.
But that IS about who is more popular. We don't take each individual
scientist, evaluate how good they are, and decide to rank their views
according to that. Instead we shotgun it and say nearly everyone
believes Albert not Gertie, so we'll declare him the winner.
At a more abstract level, I don't see why you think we can even evaluate
credibility. You point out how we can't evaluate theories well because
we're notnecessarily qualified to do so, and I agree with that. But if
we can't evaluate those theories, how can we evaluate how well the
people who do evaluate those theories are doing? That's what makes
someone credible: they get things right. But if we can't work out what's
right, how can we tell if they're getting it right?
Popularity. It's a popularity contest.
It's also a popularity contest on other levels. A typical edit war
starts when person A believes source or view X while person B believes
source or view Y. Which source or view is the most "credible"? Well,
it's whichever one gets the most people turning up to support it on the
talk page! If consensus isn't going to happen, it's always going to end
up in a "vote": whether formal or informal.
Jimbo, I think we basically agree, except that you think what's written
is the way things really work. I'm all for keeping crackpots off
wikipedia, but I don't think the current policy lets us. That they're
mostly kept off is despite policy, not because of it. Unfortunately I
also think our current means of dealing with it (throw it to a
popularity contest) probably keeps off legitimate minority views too.
Shane.
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