On 8/25/06, Sarah <slimvirgin(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Fastfission, I agree with you, and in a sane and
rational world, I'd
have written exactly the kind of caption you suggest. Unfortunately,
with these highly politicized articles on Wikipedia, particularly
anything connected to Israel, rationality and common sense are the
first things to fly out the window, and it is very hard to get any
intelligent editing done.
I understand that, and in no way meant to imply -- in case I did --
that I was pointing fingers at anyone in particular.
Since I'm already writing long and unmanageable opinions about NPOV, I
thought I'd append one more: the more I think through NPOV, the more I
realize what a truly radical position it is. It is often derided by
people who claim that it is not possible or that it is not desirable,
but it really does act as a powerful conceptual tool once you start to
take it seriously as a goal. It is not the same thing as objectivity
at all -- obviously one does not want to jettison an attempt for
objectivity, but objectivity does not imply neutrality (I can be
objectively non-neutral in my position on a given topic). In academic
scholarship it is very rare that anybody tries to be, or wants to be,
neutral: neutrality is seen as "not taking a side" in an important
debate, and only the most disingenous or aloof intellectuals would
think not taking a side on issues is a good, much less ethical,
approach. And yet I find myself trying hard to write for positions
that I think are objectively wrong, or to point out the criticisms
(without denigrating them) of things that I think are objectively
correct. It is a strange exercise, one very contrary to most other
forums for writing about and discussing issues. Beyond being a
pragmatic tool for making a collective encyclopedia work -- which it
does as well -- it is a very strong epistemological stance. I hadn't
really quite realized that when I first started here, and I have only
really begun to comprehend the depth of the stance in the last
half-year or so. It does not surprise me that academics in particular
have difficulty with it (and I say this as an academic).
FF