On 9/24/06, Daniel R. Tobias dan@tobias.name wrote:
There's been some discussion here lately on the desirability of including or deleting the article for some smallish private school. Actually, it's my impression that, over the couple of years I've been involved with the project, Wikipedia has been steadily moving in the direction of inclusionism in a number of subject areas, including schools, roads, pop music, and TV episodes. A while back, something had to be highly notable to be included in those subjects, but now there are articles on county roads, middle schools, upcoming as-yet- unnamed pop albums, etc.
So is this a good thing or a bad thing? At least in some areas, where there are bounded categories that are (fairly) well defined (one can always expect there will be a few edge cases though), there's some value to aiming for having a complete set of articles, even if some of them are of marginal notability and don't have all that much to be said about them. Some past U.S. vice presidents are pretty obscure now, but it would be good to have all of them anyway (do we?) We've got articles on all the popes (and various antipopes as well), though some of the early ones have practically no known facts beyond their regnal names and (sometimes approximate) dates of office. We've got all the U.S. census-listed places, thanks to an early "bot" run, and probably should aim to get similarly complete coverage of the rest of the world, even including remote villages of tiny population; it's useful in the aggregate to be able to look up any place (particularly when this is integrated into applications where you can click on a spot on a map for more information).
So, should we be just as complete for schools, albums, songs, TV shows, and so on? Would that just be duplicating IMDB, etc., or would it be helping to make Wikipedia a one-stop resource for more in- depth info (including links where appropriate to other sites like IMDB) on everything in each of these fields?
-- == Dan ==
It is a complicated issue, and "inclusionists" have a very good point: if it is verifiable, why not put it in the encyclopedia? It's not like inclusion of one article hurts another.
I am sympathetic to this point, I am, but I really think that it only goes so far. The truth is this: we *are* an encyclopedia, and encyclopedias should only contain entries that pass atleast some level of notability. Otherwise, if we let just any school, company, band, movie, tv-show character, &c in, we are creating notability that wasn't there before. An entry in an encyclopedia gives the subject some inherent notability. In my opinion, this is not desirable if we are acheive the standard of other encyclopedias. We should be careful to not let ourself devolve into some mass of facts, because that does devalue the things that really deserve an article.
What I'm saying is, on a longer timescale, using WP:V as the sole criteria for inclusion does hurt the encyclopedia as a whole. One mans opinion, anyway.
--Oskar