User talk:Chalst/archive-1Welcome messageWelcome! Hello, Chalst/archive-1, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few good links for newcomers:
I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your name on talk pages using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically produce your name and the date. If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Where to ask a question, ask me on my talk page, or place Some pages in need of serious attentionSorry, I hope I didn't discourage you from editing; there are some logic pages that need serious attention! --- Axiom for example has some appalling innaccuracies about the Godel completeness theorem (this and the incompleteness theroem are the logic equivalent of Schrodinger's cat). Possible worlds isn't bad, but an explicit (maybe simplified) discussion of models of modal logic would be helpful. (Having such a discussion, would make it clearer the distinction between Possible worlds and many-worlds interpretation) CSTAR 14:02, 13 Aug 2004 (UTC)
GJ on logic, careful w/ red linksHey, thanks for some excellent additions to logic, they'll really help the article out. I've made a couple changes already, but one thing I noticed was just superficial so I thought I'd alert you to it here. After your major edit you left several red links. In general, when you preview an article you should look at all the red links and see if you can fix them. Of course some articles won't exist yet, but major topics almost always exist, and you may have to search for it to see the exact page name to use for the link. Familiarity with general naming conventions will help you find these pages hopefully. [[User:Siroxo|—siroχo —siroχo]] 05:13, Aug 26, 2004 (UTC)
Sorry I interfered too quickly. I thought it was another case of breaking up an entry into meaningless entrylets. I suppose some text is coming? Wetman 07:08, 26 Aug 2004 (UTC)
howdy! --The Cunctator Argumention and politicsHello! I appreciate your comments on the talk pages and your contributions to articles. My interest in logic and argument is more a matter of urgency, perhaps felt more vividly on this side of the Atlantic, where I see a gradual slide from open discourse in the political arena to jingoism, religious fundamentalism and political intimidation. Who knows where this will end. I'd like to see wikipedia at least provide a foundation for some relevant concepts in discourse.CSTAR 17:35, 5 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Lob's Theoremi welcome the revision on the Lob's theorem page, but the current (which was the original) intro. is completely confusing. i idiotically replied to you in my own talk page. anyway, talking about 'satisfies' there was in regard to the Peano axioms wrt to a particular theory T. i wasn't talking about the satisfiability of axiomatic statements of T. i think it strange to say that the Peano axioms are provable from T, but it works. also, the formalizing it in modal provability logic has the benefit of abstracting from any particular provability theory. unfortunately i dont' know how to format it using the proper typesetting. the revision was quick and i've no time to look into it now. we can keep the informal definition of lob's theorem as it stands, but it most certainly isn't elegant let alone clear. Gödel's incompleteness theoremUser_talk:Sundar#G.F6del.27s_incompleteness_theorem Hilbert's problemsI see you have put a disputed notice on Hilbert's problems. Is this perhaps a bit extreme ? The usage guidelines suggest only using the disputed notice if there are more than 5 dubious or inaccurate statements in an article, whereas I think you have only highlighted two statements that you disagree with. Also, Mathworld seems to verify that Hilbert's first and second problems are generally accepted as having been solved. I'm all in favour of a debate - it's one of the joys of Wikpedia - but I do think the disputed notice is going too far. Gandalf61 09:18, Oct 22, 2004 (UTC)
Quantum logicThere is a link to the article on quantum logic in the logic page. It would be a useful project to try to add some intro material to that article to make it accessible to somebody reading the logic page (so far I have been the only contributor to that page -- for all I know I may be its only reader). One fact to note that it is not really about logic as much as a semantics for a logic. The logic I guess would be the free algebra generated by a set S modulo relations which are true for in representations of S as self-adjoint projections. This would have some significance for logic in at least giving some plausibility to the Putnamist notion that logic is empirical. (I am not sure I believe this, although I have a lot sympathy for this view since I have a lot of empiricist blood running in my veins) CSTAR 20:52, 22 Oct 2004 (UTC)
I added the Is logic empirical subsection as per our discussion. There are several issues which require additional comment or about which I am not entirely satisfied:
CSTAR 22:57, 25 Oct 2004 (UTC) (I changed your bullet points into an enumeration, above) I don't really have time to give a proper reaction to what you have wrote before Thursday; I'll put my comments on the Logic talk page when I do. For now, responding to your points as they are numbered:
I think I'll pass on the remarks to a philosopher, to see if he can give me any useful pointers. May as well get on top of this stuff, while the subject has come up. ---- Charles Stewart 08:18, 26 Oct 2004 (UTC) Logical Argument: Thanks for being informativeI am touched that as an RV-er, you informed me, and left relavant notes in the talk page. If only all wikipedians were as thoughtful. Let us continue any discussion at the said talk page. (20040302)
Quine's paperI have reverted the article on Two Dogmas of Empiricism to the way that the title of the paper appears in the body of the article. Capitalization of published work is retained in the title of the article. Cheers,[[User:Noisy|Noisy | Talk]] 19:45, 15 Nov 2004 (UTC) NobelistsJust a thought. I was doing New Page patrol and saw that you had a new page on List of for the Nobels. Did you check the Nobel Prize article? I believe it breaks down to categories, and there is already a List of Nobel Prize winners for each category. Perhaps a category tag would be better, and that way you could recombine those later for a master list. Geogre 16:21, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Hilbert's 1st ProblemHi, I have changed the status of Hilbert's 1st problem to solved as I believe that is the commonly accepted state of the problem in the mathematical community. I know you were in a discussion of what the status would be and so I would appreciate your input on my reasons. I have given them in more detail Talk:Hilbert's problems#More on the 1st problem. Thanks a lot Aleph0 02:45, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC) Comment on Hilbert's 1st Problem ChangeHi, I just wanted to say that I think that the footnote answer is an excelent idea. Aleph0 01:00, 21 Nov 2004 (UTC) POV(This is a copy of a note I sent to Charles Matthews). A relatively new user has added the POV banner to the logical argument article. I tried to respond to his/her comments, but I noticed that user has added the asme banner to a large range of articles, including physical law and mathematical rigor. Now it's possible this user is trying to make a philosophical point: complete NPOV is not possible. What do you think? CSTAR 03:03, 1 Dec 2004 (UTC)
About Users Critical and CStarFor the record, the user Critical ( talk, contributions), who slapped the "disputed NPoV" sticker on some pages, has made his or her first edits tonight (or today) and within less than two hours has attacked eight articles for PoV, including (ironically given the CStar example given on the Logical fallacy talk page), Physical law. These were the only "edits" (plus weak justifications on talk pages in the same vein as this one). I don't think the PoV claim has merit. We may ask if this series of attacks is to be taken seriously. For the following reasons I am thinking that these pages has been the victim of a tiresome semi-sophisticated troll and the PoV sticker should be removed sooner rather than later, if not immediately. We may note that CStar ( talk, contributions) after making edits, paused during the period user Critical made edits, and then CStar took up responding to these edits after the series of user Critical edits ends, as if there is only one user involved, and the user logged out, changed cookies and logged back in. Further, user CStar left a note on Charles Matthew's talk page, Chalst's talk page, and Angela's talk page pointing to a supposed PoV accusation placed on the Logical argument page, when in fact no such sticker has been placed. Perhaps the irony regarding the Physical law page is not so ironic. Hu 05:19, 2004 Dec 1 (UTC) ResponsePleas see this on the logical fallacy talk page. CSTAR 13:50, 1 Dec 2004 (UTC) NPOV'ingresponse on my talk page. CSTAR 04:46, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC) Relevant logic to Relevance logic movedDone. Correctly, I hope.CSTAR 01:08, 7 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Other logic pagesWouldn't cleanup be desirable and hopefully possible here also? CSTAR 03:51, 7 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Informal logic and logical argument might be fused; I've worked on both, only because they were already there. I wouldn't have started them both. Logical fallacy could use some improvement. The actual list of logical fallacies is in urgent need of population control. Abstinence doesn't appear to be working here (Does it ever?).CSTAR 18:17, 8 Dec 2004 (UTC) That article really is awful. Why is Edward de Bono given such prominent mention? Actually, who the Hell is Edward de Bono? He's got a pretty lame website ---- Well at least we don't have Florentin Smarandache to contend with. CSTAR 00:30, 9 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Article LicensingHi, I've started a drive to get users to multi-license all of their contributions that they've made to either (1) all U.S. state, county, and city articles or (2) all articles, using the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike (CC-by-sa) v1.0 and v2.0 Licenses or into the public domain if they prefer. The CC-by-sa license is a true free documentation license that is similar to Wikipedia's license, the GFDL, but it allows other projects, such as WikiTravel, to use our articles. Since you are among the top 2000 Wikipedians by edits, I was wondering if you would be willing to multi-license all of your contributions or at minimum those on the geographic articles. Over 90% of people asked have agreed. For More Information:
To allow us to track those users who muli-license their contributions, many users copy and paste the "{{DualLicenseWithCC-BySA-Dual}}" template into their user page, but there are other options at Template messages/User namespace. The following examples could also copied and pasted into your user page:
OR
Or if you wanted to place your work into the public domain, you could replace "{{DualLicenseWithCC-BySA-Dual}}" with "{{MultiLicensePD}}". If you only prefer using the GFDL, I would like to know that too. Please let me know what you think at my talk page. It's important to know either way so no one keeps asking. -- Ram-Man (comment| talk) Logic featured article statusI'm not sure whether it was my idea to make it a featured article -- actually it may have been your idea. But in any case, I agree with it. I would like to see more references to semantics in the logic articles generally. The main logic article itself makes some timid references to semantics. Yep the see also section is a complete mess. Let's farm it out.CSTAR 19:35, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC) indie record labelSorry, I did not know the protocol. --Smooth Henry 18:17, Feb 4, 2005 (UTC) Bell's theoremIn response to your comment over on Charles Matthews talk page: As it turned out Sterling Newberry finally (and quite independently) removed the POV banner; hopefully this ends the story. However, there was something very disturbing in the whole episode. As I mentioned, CT has a very public agenda which she freely admits, allows for no compromise with accepted interpretations and formalism of quantum mechanics. Or rather, I should say her proposed compromise was that (to paraphrase her) she (i.e. local realism) gets Bell's theorem and peripheral pages because QM has taken up the rest. I did take the time to read her webpages---They're utter lunacy. She rejects Michelson-Morley, postulates the existence of an aether, seems to suggest electrons don't exist etc. etc. It is pretty pathetic reading how she gets continually rejected by the establishment. She may not be quite as bad as Archimedes Plutonium, but at least there is something endearing and funny about him. Surely we should be able to deal with such crankery a little more expeditiously. This whole rewrite of the page has taken two days shy of a month. CSTAR 22:45, 8 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Linking between namespacesHi there, Charles! After you left a message on my talk page, I went ahead and performed the obligatory hmmm let's see who sent me this message inquiry. I noticed that you'd linked to your userpage from Charles Stewart, but it's generally considered bad practice to link to other namepsaces from the main namespace. If someone wrote a Wikipedia article on you, then by all means, feel free to link to it. But as most people aren't notable enough to warrant a Wikipedia biography, and autobiographies are discouraged, I'm guessing there's no Charles A. Stewart article around :-) So I've removed the link to your userpage, and I hope you understand. Best wishes and happy editing! --David Iberri | Talk 00:35, Feb 10, 2005 (UTC) POV warriorI just noticed your comments now about "POV warrior." Huh? I don't think I ever talked to you before. This was our first conflict (and I would say a rather minor one) on an article, and you immediately made that derogatory remark before I even posted my first comment on the talk page. Interesting OneGuy 04:58, 10 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Possible WorldsA bit over a week ago, I wrote on the Talk:Possible worlds page:
I'd like to revisit the possible worlds article, and I'd like to know where you stand, because I think you have a valuable take on the question. I guess the question is: where do you stand on the question of acceptable axiomatisations of alethic modalities? Did I read you aright? ---- Charles Stewart 22:46, 10 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Anti-IslamismCharles, regarding the stub you created. Is your definition accurate? Online sources suggest that the term is used to refer to anti-Muslim sentiment. Your stub is already the first entry under a Google search for anti-Islamism, and a lot of Muslims deny there's such a thing as Islamism as such (as a distinct political movement), so it could end up being a tricky, inherently POV article. What do you think? SlimVirgin 00:06, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC)
I didn't realize that an article existed elsewhere on this. I've only seen your stub. I also don't know what the old and new meanings are. The sources I saw on Google weren't Wikipedia-related by and large; they were Muslim websites and Arab newspaper articles mainly. I think the problem with defining anti-Islamism as opposition to Islamism is (a) not everyone agrees that there's such a thing as Islamism, and (b) that aside, most people, I would say, have never heard of it. So the term, pro or anti, is a battleground: almost by definition POV and inclining toward original research, in the same way that Jewish ethnocentrism was, which has thankfully just been deleted. SlimVirgin 00:34, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC)
Thanks for explaining. I've deleted most of what was there, which perhaps I shouldn't have, but it was all so tawdry, and with no references. I would agree with you about having all the issues dealt with under one roof. The problem is that, if this article is to deal with legitimate criticism, a lot of the sources, and perhaps all, that could be used (I'm thinking of Daniel Pipes, for example) will be dismissed as Islamophobes; so I wonder where you will find sources that others will regard as fair. SlimVirgin 01:30, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC)
I agree. I see the term Islamophobe as neutral myself (meaning fear of, or dislike of, but leaving aside whether the reasons for that are good or bad), but I'm probably in the minority in interpreting it that way. Pipes is a scholar and I would regard him as an excellent source, bearing in mind that he is extreme and resolute, but I know others won't accept him as a source, or anyone else who is knowledgeable and critical, so I foresee a future of hideous revert wars or else an article with zero sources. I therefore feel the way to proceed might be to draw up an acceptable list of sources in advance of writing the article, and to seek consensus for it, because we can only proceed to writing if we know we will have sources. SlimVirgin 02:05, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC)
Luftangriff auf DresdenHello Charles Stewart, for the moment the article on German Wikipedia isn't ready yet, we had some problems last days because of a started edit war. But there is hope, that all participants, specially "Benutzer:Jesusfreund (User Jesusfreund)" don't give up and find a solution about the question, witch historical facts are proofed and how the text should be like. If this problem is solved I think, you will be supported in the translation. Sorry, my English is bad - I am not the person, who ever could translate ;-) - Have a nice day, --Nocturne 07:22, 11 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Translation of "Gedenken", German article, last sectionMemoryOn February 13th each year memory events take place in Dresden. All Dresden church bells ring at 10:13 PM – the exact time when the bombing started that day. In 1995, on the 50th anniversary of the attacks, a bell sinphony was performed including all bells of the city. In 2002, citizens of Dresden and its partnertown Coventry, which had also been hit severly by German bombing in World war II, came together. Following the motto „Build bridges – live forgiveness and brotherhood („Versöhnung“) they put up a sign against war and hate. They met at the Dresden „Frauenkirche“ (womans church) which had been totally destroyed by the attacks. In the meantime it has been restored almost completely. This rebuilding was successful because of the activities of mainly British and German fundraising clubs. Parallel to that old and new right wing extremists try to abuse the anniversaries of the bombings for their gatherings and revisionist propaganda. The number of demonstrators which follow the invitation of the „Junge Landsmannschaft Ostpreußen“ (young landfellows of east prussia) is increasing continuously. The date has developed to be one of the biggest regular events including Neonazis from all over Germany and other countries. Gouvernor Georg Milbradt (CDU-party) therefor has rejected to overtake the „leadership“ for the event in 2005, which Holger Apfel (NPD-party) then accepted for himself. Their prefered term „bombing Holocaust“ is meant to relativate the Holocaust and to describe the complete warfare of the Allied coalition as a crime, in order to put the guilt for the war on them and to minimize or even deny the German guilt. They abuse some historical facts for that purpose, f.e. the planned and worked out mass destuction of the central city of Dresden which didn´t make much military sense. They want to describe Germanys former enemies, especially the US, as outstanding inhumane and cruel, comparing their behavior to German war crimes thus justifying these. This ideological abuse one cannot find in the National Democratic Party (NPD) only but it is also a widespread mentality. As a reaction, some Antifascists groups try to oppose this abuse with paroles like „German actors are no victims“, „No tears for Dresden“ or „Bomber-Harris do it again“. They fear the „breaking-a-taboo“-approach of the historical discussion about German war victims will continously justify Nazi thought and behavior. Protesting this they celebrate the bombing of Dresden as a necessary part of winning the military fight against Nazi-Germany. The city council of Dresden therefore forbids any demonstration in the center of Dresden on that day every year. But moreover, it tries to regain initiative for the way of celebrating the memory day with its own events. A very important part of that are the partnership contacts with the city of Coventry and the Church work for „Versöhnung“. Both try to build up understanding beyond national limits for the fact that German guilt of war cannot be weighed with others war crimes. There is no doubt possible that Germany started the war and its crimes cannot be relativated. But what happened in the war was an increasing abstraction of the warfare from rational aims. This tendency cannot be looked at by isolating it from the criminal plans and actions of Nationalsocialism. But also, the Allied bombings of populated cities cannot be interpreted as a necessary and unevitable reaction to these Nazi crimes. Most of the survivors of the bombings who suffered unmeasurable pain and their relatives conclude from their terrifying war experiences: Remembering all the victims on both sides together, humanely, without accusations, is the best healing - instead of the undignified counting and comparing of victims and distributing guilt portions.
I wish to complain about the usage in the Bombing of Dresden page of the terms "self-taught, controversial, Holocaust denier David Irving" especially in light of the fact that you give a link to his Wikipedia page as well. Why the labels if people can easily look up(on the site no less) who he is and what he is about? It doesn´t make any sense then. I mean one could have said "Nazi Propoganda Minister Joseph Goebbels" but you didn´t. It seems odd to put lables on one person but not another. Also I do not like the connection between the number of deaths and the fact that he is a holocaust denier. Not all people who dispute the numbers are holocaust deniers and to combine the two as if it is an automatic thing is to deny the dignity of those who dispute the numbers.
Subjunctive and alethic modalitiesThanks for your question about the usage of "subjunctive" and "alethic." The quick answer is that the "subjunctive" / "epistemic" contrast comes from David Chalmers. The longer answer is that Chalmers frames the distinction as a distinction between subjunctive and epistemic (modalities, content) because he approaches the difference from the difference between indicative-mood conditionals and past-subjunctive-mood conditionals, which lines up with the metaphysical/epistemic modality distinction. ("If I am the King of France, then I'll have their heads cut off" vs. "If I were the King of France, then I'd have their heads cut off"). For myself, I usually prefer framing the distinction in terms of metaphysical vs. epistemic modalities; but "subjunctive" vs. "epistemic" currently seems to be the most widely used across WikiPedia articles (see e.g. Logical possibility), so it seems as good a candidate as any for adoption. Of course, I'm hardly wedded to this; if you think there are strong reasons not to frame it this way, let me know and we'll see what we can work out. —Radgeek 13:48, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC) |