[WikiEN-l] Writing with our readers in mind
Fred Bauder
fredbaud at ctelco.net
Sat Jul 9 18:18:35 UTC 2005
This is quite obvious and most egregious in any topic which can be
related to as concerning philosophy. We have no decent articles for
[[truth]] [[knowledge]] or [[reality]] thanks to academic efforts.
Fred
On Jul 9, 2005, at 11:44 AM, Jon wrote:
> Do we have anywhere a statement that editors should think of their
> readers when writing? For me, that's commonsense: whether at work,
> speaking or writing to different clients, or chatting with friends,
> I always bear in mind who I am communicating with and trying to use
> words, language and style that suits them.
>
> However, increasingly I see other editors deciding they prefer an
> "academic" style. What this means is that, if you are an academic
> in the field being discussed, you can understand what they are
> saying. However, if you are not, the articles remain impenetrable -
> and attempts to tweak them so they are more intelligible to the
> vast majority of readers get rebuffed.
>
> It would be useful (if we don't already have it somewhere that I've
> missed) to have a firm statement that says articles should be
> written to be as intelligible to as many of our readers as
> possible, with our readers being anyone potentially searching for
> English-language information on the internet.
>
> Jon (jguk)
>
>
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