User talk:SteveMcCluskey/Archive 1
Question?You recently commented on an edit that I made. I responded on my talk page, but I am not sure whether or not you are notified of this automatically. Is there a way to make this notification happen? Thanks!--Heyitspeter 22:28, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
Another helloWelcome to Wikipedia! Are you the Steve McCluskey, author of Astronomies and Cultures in the Early Middle Ages? Wikipedia is badly in need of more editors with an interest in the history of pre-modern science. How did you decide to become an editor? You don't have to answer that if you don't want to--I won't be offended. Another user and I are trying to come up with a solution to the problem of categorizing medieval astronomers and astrologers. The problems I see are as follows:
Any thoughts you have on this matter are appreciated. You can read some of the comments on my talk page, through which you can also access the other user's talk page. Maestlin 17:43, 1 May 2006 (UTC) Glad to be hereThanks for the kind welcomes. Yes I am that Steve McCluskey who does early astronomies. As to how I came to the History of Science Project, I was looking over Alun Salt's new revisions of the Archaeoastronomy page, and wanted to see how (or whether) it was linked to History of Science. It seems to have some appropriate connections at present, but I may add a few more. BTW, Alun was quite rigorous in providing footnotes for all of his claims; I think it's a good idea and perhaps we should encourage it (at least by example) in the History of Science section. It suits Wikipedia's Verifiability policy and would help prevent things like the to do about "Plato's theory of Refraction." (The format is at Wikipedia:Footnotes) As time allows this summer, I'll get around to reorganizing the section on "Pre-experimental" science into something like "Ancient Science." It will probably be an outline in need of details, but there are other people who can fill in the gaps. --SteveMcCluskey 14:54, 2 May 2006 (UTC) Ibn al-ShatirThanks for rewriting Ibn al-Shatir so quickly. I have been putting this off for a while, not wanting to take the time for the necessary review. Maestlin 18:33, 15 May 2006 (UTC) atomismI don't see any content on the website you listed. Which parts are copyvio? If you're sure, just delete the offending parts.--ragesoss 03:33, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
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I like the statement, but.."Knowledge is a gift of God..", Let me say, rare would be the individual who could refute that, its elegantly expressed. I certainly can't refute it. A gift of god can hardly be ignored. Does the statement disambiguate Knowledge from Understanding, or are the two considered to be the same? Terryeo 16:40, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
More discussion on WP:RS Talk re: Electronic mailing listsA new proposal, minus the cautions, from user Doright has been added to our discussion. If you want to know what's behind this, review Talk:On the Jews and Their Lies, but only if your really want to know. 8-) --CTSWyneken 10:49, 11 June 2006 (UTC) Well, Doright unilaterally inserted his text as follows, replacing the one we discussed. I reverted once, and he has now reverted it. I'm backing off to prevent an edit war. I would appreciate it if you would comment on this. The text he has inserted says: Electronic mailing list archives Electronic mailing list archives are collections of email messages related to a given topic. If such a list is moderated by a reliable entity or hosted by a reputable organization (e.g., H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, that confirms the identity of its contributors, they may not suffer from the above stated identity problem of Usenet. Therefore, they can be cited and carry the authority (if any) of the person being cited. As with all sources, it is incumbent upon the editor to ensure that the person being cited is notable. All citations must include the name of the person being cited, the message subject line, the archive or forum name and date. --CTSWyneken 20:22, 11 June 2006 (UTC) BedeHi Steve, I was just wondering why all that material was deleted from Bede [1] - is it factually wrong? -- Stbalbach 00:31, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
Steve, thanks for your corrections to my Chronica Maiora comments in the Bede article. I didn't know the details; all I did know was that the Chronica deserved a mention and that no-one else had yet said anything on it. I still wonder if Bede's works are arranged in the proper order in that article. Bede himself might have preferred a chronological approach... -- Zimriel 17:34, 24 January 2007 (UTC) awaiting your replyHi Steve, awaiting your reply [here] Hey Steve, thanks for your courteous reply. Cheers, Doright 18:30, 13 June 2006 (UTC) archaeoastronomyIndeed, the astronomy is impeccable, but it's astronomy based on shoddy philology: It is philological nonsense to assume to find astronomical statements precise to the arc minute in ancient hymns. Once this assumption is made, straightforward astronomy can be used to arrive at nonsensical conclusion. See also my description at Image:Vedic_pleiades.png. dab (ᛏ) 13:17, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
thank you again :) I bought Kak's book a couple of years ago in India as an obvious curiosity, for a chuckle; it's still sitting on my "crackpot" shelf, but I didn't expect it to haunt me on the Internet. It is simply incredible what people infected by that "measles of mankind" (nationalism) will put up with to get to believe in their version of history, and I am not just talking about Indians here. dab (ᛏ) 14:23, 24 June 2006 (UTC) arXiv againHi there, maybe I'm too optimistic about the quality of stuff on preprint servers. The question is if preprints (possible only those that fit some credibility criterion) can be used as reliable sources or if we should wait until the paper has appeared in a refereed journal You opinion here would be appreciated. Cheers! Dr Zak 03:45, 17 June 2006 (UTC) History of Mathematics ReferencesThanks for pointing that out to me. We can leave the History of Mathematics article as it is now (in three separate sections) —Mets501 (talk) 23:43, 24 June 2006 (UTC) antipodesHi Steve -- I think you are mistaken about the direction of the linguistic change in question. antipodes was a geographical term *originally*. It was later extended to refer to the inhabitants of the region: this happened already in Latin, and the term entered English in both senses. I wouldn't know that the secondary meaning is now again obsolete, I would tend to claim that antipodes remains the correct term even today. I recognize, however, that antipodean (as opposed to 'correct' antipodal; this has to do with the back formation of a singular antipode (as opposed to 'correct' antipous) from antipodes) already in 1913 Webster's is listed as the generic adjective (not referring to people in particular). [2] has "mainly humorous". dab (ᛏ) 20:04, 16 August 2006 (UTC) Hi, Steve. My last edits in the article were made late in the evening; it's not impossible that I had screwed something up. I hope not. :-) About the footnotes, my source was actually the citations of Ethical Atheist website (here). I thought that I could trust them here, especially because many citations were even arguably against their preferred view. In Portuguese (my language) there are ways to cite something like "<ref>''John Doe'' (...), cited by ''Author Jack'' in http://(...),,</ref>". But I don't know how to do that in English, so I did it the easier way. My passage about Lactantius's heresy and lack of influence came from here. ( very interesting text!) This info also seemed to be more or less confirmed by his biography here in the Wikipedia. You said you think the passage is unnecessarily argumentative. Well, I find useful an attempt at describing the relevance of each writer in that list (A next step I was intending to do was to remark the importance of Saint John Chrysostom - a doctor of the church!). Anyway, maybe you're right and the text, (and maybe also future references to these author’s popularity), should be removed. For now, I'll leave that choice to you. The source I just gave about Lacantius is part of an exhibit about the Shape of the Earth. And can be useful to further improve the Flat Earth article. For example: it mentions that people other than "Christian writers" also occasionally questioned the sphericity of the earth (as a consequence, our current intro is inaccurate). Latter, the exhibit also mentions the Globus cruciger as the representation of a spherical Earth, (not a spherical cosmos). … It has great hi-quality PD-art pictures too. --Leinad ¬ »saudações! 20:45, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
Citation needed
.. Sorry butI'm going to have reverse you and remove the stub tag. I'm not sure you are understanding what the tag is for. It is not an attention tag or a cleanup tag or an expansion tag. It means that the page is short and barely long enough for inclusion in the encyclopedia. Well that is a full article. Does it need cleaning up or expansion or attention? Maybe, but then those tags should be used, not the stub tag. I added the attention tag for now. If you feel like the expansion tag or some other tag is more appopriate, be my guest, but the stub tags don't fit an article that long with no empty sections. --Woohookitty(meow) 22:59, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
Scientific RevolutionSteve, I took a shot at it based on the sources sitting on my bookshelf. I'll keep an eye on further discussions... hopefully Logicus will not be too recalcitrant. Let me know if there is anything else you think I should mention (especially any questions that relate to the Dear or Shapin books). On a related note, it may be appropriate to have a separate article on Historiography of the Scientific Revolution. Maybe we can find someone to donate a graduate-level historiography essay for some starting material.--ragesoss 01:40, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Steve, I acceded to your request on the anonymous user and will monitor the page for further action if needed. ragesoss and Steve, please feel free to request additional actions. --Ancheta Wis 23:02, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
if you [potsed your proposed article here first. Logicus 18:58, 27 September 2006 (UTC) Greek scienceThanks Steve for expanding Wikipedia so much about Greek Science. About a year ago there were only few lines about it in the History of science in early cultures article. Ygmarchi 10:05, 3 October 2006 (UTC) Dobbs and JacobBetty Jo Teeter Dobbs and Margaret C. Jacob (1995), Newton and the Culture of Newtonianism ISBN 1-57392-545-4 p. 9 "Newton was not a skeptic. On the contrary, he seems to have adopted a contemporary response to questions of valid knowledge called the doctrine of "the unity of Truth", a position that was in fact one answer to the problem of skepticism. Not only did Newton repect the idea that Truth was accessible to the human mind, but also he was very much inclined to accord to several systems of thought the right to claim access to some aspect of the Truth. For those who adopted this point of view, the many different systems they encountered tended to appear complementary rather than competitive. The assumption they made was that Truth did indeed exist somewhere beyond the apparently conflicting representations of it currently available. True knowledge was unitary, and its unity was guaranteed by the unity of the Deity. He being the source of all Truth. As a practical matter, those who followed this doctrine of the unity of Truth became quite eclectic, which is to say that each thinker selected parts of different systems and welded them into a new synthetic whole that seemed to him (or her) to be closer to Truth. That was certainly Newton's method, and in the course of his long life he marshaled the evidence from every source of evidence available to him: mathematics, experiment, observation, reason, the divine revelations in biblical texts, historical records, mythology, contemporary scientific texts, the tattered remnants of ancient philosophical wisdom, and the literature and practice of alchemy." [18, 84, 85] p. 10 "One must realize, however, that in making selections from the various sources available to him Newton utilized a sophisticated balancing procedure that enabled him to make critical judgements about the validity of each. Perhaps the most important element in Newton's contribution to scientific method as it developed in subsequent centuries was the element of balance, for no single approach to knowledge ever proved to be effective in settling the knowledge crisis of the Renaissance and the early modern periods. Human senses are subject to error; so is human reason. So is the interpretation of revelation; so is the mathematico-deductive scientific method put forward by Descartes earlier in the century. Since every single approach to knowledge was subject to error, a more certain knowledge was to be obtained by utilizing each approach to correct the other; the senses to be rectified by reason, reason to be rectified by revelation, and so forth." [18] "The self-correcting character of Newton's procedure constitutes the superiority of Newton's method over that of earlier natural philosophers, for others had certainly used the separate elements of inductive reasoning, deductive reasoning, mathematics, experiment, and observation before him, and often in some combination. But Newton's method was not limited to the balancing of those approaches to knowledge that still constitute the elements of modern scientific methodology, nor has one any reason to assume that he would deliberately have limited himself to those familiar approaches even if he had been prescient enough to realize that those were all the future would consider important. Newton's goal was much broader than the goal of modern science. Modern science focuses on a knowledge of nature and only on that. In contrast, Newton's goal was a Truth that encompassed natural principles but also divine ones as well. He had a deep religious concern to establish the relationship between God and His creation (nature), and so he constantly searched for the boundaries between God and nature where divine and natural principles met and fused. As a result, Newton's balancing procedure included also the knowledge he had garnered from theology, revelation, alchemy, history, and the wise ancients." [18] references: [18] B.J.T. Dobbs (1991), The Janus Faces of Genius: The Role of Alchemy in Newton's Thought Cambridge University Press [84] Richard H. Popkin, ed. Millenarianism and Messianism in English Literature and Thought, 1650-1800. Clark Library Lectures, 1981-2. Publications from the Clark Library Professorship, UCLA, no. 10. Leiden: E.J. Brill 1988 [85] Arthur Quinn. The Confidence of British Philosophers: An Essay in Historical Narrative. Studies in the History of Christian Thought. 17 Ed. Heiko A. Oberman, in cooperation with Henry Chadwick, Edward A. Dowey, Jaroslav Pelikan, and E. David Willis. Leiden: E.J. Brill 1977 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ancheta Wis (talk • contribs) 04:46, 1 October 2006 moving onYou said: "I think we should go ahead on this article without Logicus, and if he further disrupts the project by reverting our work, we should call for him to be banned from working on this article as a disruptive editor." Sadly, I have to agree with you at this point... he seems unwilling to participate in a constructive way. However, I propose that we continue going systematically through the article, letting Logicus air his grievances if he wants to; it will at least give us incentive to strengthen and focus the language, as we've done for the background section. You and I probably have a different enough perspective that continued comparison of sources and working at a consensus between us will be beneficial (and I've enjoyed working with you thus far). (Incidently, Iantresman isn't such a bad guy from what I can tell... at least he has respect for sources and recognizes that the topics he is interested are not widely accepted; he just disagrees about how such topics should be treated. And given the degree of scientism evinced by some editors, I partially sympathize with his concerns.) --ragesoss 21:07, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for the heads up, reverted back to anons version. - RoyBoy 800 16:53, 19 October 2006 (UTC) I noticed that you changed the description on the linked image on September 29th. I was curious - did you translate from the website the image was originally released on? Captainktainer * Talk 20:20, 22 October 2006 (UTC)
Newton's affinitiesThanks a bunch for your book suggestions! I have Newton's Principia (1687) and Opticks (1704) and there is a little bit there. I’ll check into the books you recommend. I also recently bought Trevor H. Levere’s 1971 book Affinity and Matter – Elements of Chemical Philosophy 1800-1865 and it has lot of Newton stuff in it as well as many other affinity theories. I'll add your suggestions to chemical affinity. Thanks again. --Sadi Carnot 12:15, 28 October 2006 (UTC) Aquinas or Kepler on universal inertia ?Wakey, wakey ! Would be most grateful for your opinion on the query I have raised about this issue today in Scientific Revolution Talk, re claims in the Duhem weblink provided.Logicus 14:56, 28 October 2006 (UTC) Good work!I have finally noticed the work that you did on Historiography and nationalism -- thank you ever so much! I started that article and then didn't do much with it. I was burnt out by dealing with Iranian nationalists and anti-Muslim bigots, and had to take a wiki-break for several months. I'd like to read that Geary book that you cited. When I get a round tuit I would like to start work on a policy re identifying historical figures and entities (artifacts, books, people, empires, etc.) that would cut off all the stupid stupid debates about which current group gets to claim bragging rights over something or other. Things should be identified by tags that were relevant at the time. Various Abbasid scientists, mathematicians, poets, etc. could be described as Abbasids born in the Abbasid province of X -- not as Arabs, Persians, Iranians, Uzbekis, whatever. Someone like Rumi is classifiable in terms that were relevant to contemporaries; he completely evades modern classifications. Various national projects are so strong on WP that it's going to be work of many people and many years to prune them back. Zora 19:12, 9 November 2006 (UTC) KeplerSteve, I just finished and moved into mainspace my (draft) re-write of Johannes Kepler. I'd love to have your feedback, and if possible, your help improving it.--ragesoss 07:06, 16 December 2006 (UTC) Thank youAElfric 04:01, 2 February 2007 (UTC)Ælfric Ælfric 23:00, 2 February 2007 Thank you for your comments. I am a new Wikipedia contributor. I have a Ph.D. in English literature. My website is www.carmenbutcher.com. I have published a few books in Old English, on Benedict of Nursia, on medieval women mystics, and in linguistics. I have published with Cambridge University Press, Heinle Thomson, Mercer University, and Paraclete Press, for example. I cut the bibliographies and tried to make my articles more appealing to a general audience. Thanks for the suggestions! I'm still learning how to do this! Best wishes, Carmen Butcher Comments on RFC proposalHey there. Thanks for the added comments on the proposal I had done on RFC/User clerks; I actually withdrew the proposal several days ago when it became obvious on the Village Pump that the majority of people felt it was unnecessary. Nice to hear someone else liked it, though! Cheers. Tony Fox (arf!) 19:33, 3 February 2007 (UTC) Notification templatesI replied to your request here. I should at least have some drafts for discussion and revision ready later today. Ben 22:38, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
RFC-related templates and shortcuts:
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Wikibug againThe bot is attempting to add date and category material to fact templates located within <ref> </ref> footnotes. It fails and leaves the date in the footnotes. See Scientific Revolution for examples --SteveMcCluskey 02:10, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
great work
Self-published sourcesMr. SteveMcCluskey, I am very sorry to hear that my article concerning Galileo was not accepted. But I understand that “self-published sources” might not always be reliable. I worked on this study for 12 years and I translated it into English and Spanish (for the moment I only publish it in French). I have been selling it for 3 years. My first copy was sent to Vatican, to cardinal Paul Poupard, in November 2003. This book is sold in 100 bookshops : in France, Switzerland and Rome. Till this day, no one contradicted my semantic study. To conclude, If my book had been published by a Publisher - and if I understand well - you would have accepted it. And now, If someone else referred to my book, will or will not Wikipedia accept to publish an article concerning it ? My kind regards, Joël Col 193.248.38.37 16:38, 6 March 2007 (UTC)
Survey InvitationHi there, I am a research student from the National University of Singapore and I wish to invite you to do an online survey about Wikipedia. To compensate you for your time, I am offering a reward of USD$10, either to you or as a donation to the Wikimedia Foundation. For more information, please go to the research home page. Thank you. --WikiInquirer 04:58, 16 March 2007 (UTC)talk to me Kepler articleI just want to congratulate you as one of the editors of the Johannes Kepler article. I was so impressed with it. It is one of the best articles I have seen come through FAC. Anyway, I wanted to ask your expert advice (horror of horrors on wikipedia). I would like to read some histories of the Scientific Revolution, what would you recommend? And, by the way, I would like to read some real histories, not some popularizations. I am a graduate student of English literature and I focus on eighteenth-century children's literature, but my interests are wide-ranging. Moreover, I have these vague ideas about doing a project about science education in the eighteenth century. Have you ever seen John Newbery's Tom Telescope series? It's kind of like Newton for kids; it's great. Anyway, I have Steven Shapin, but I was wondering what else you could recommend. Thanks so much. Awadewit 18:10, 19 March 2007 (UTC) WikiProject History of Science newsletter : Issue I - March 2007The inaugural March 2007 issue of the WikiProject History of Science newsletter has been published. You're receiving this because you are a participant in the History of Science WikiProject. You may read the newsletter or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Yours in discourse--ragesoss 04:04, 24 March 2007 (UTC) Hindutva PropagandaHi. I hope you're aware that there is an AFD going on for this page. You've made changes to a version established, after the AfD started, by people who voted to delete.(!) Please see Wikipedia talk:Articles for deletion/Hindutva propaganda for an interesting timeline. I mention this only because interested parties want to see how the debate pans out, so it might be useful to let the page remain in its "preferred-by-those-voting-to-delete" state. There was some discussion of this paragraph earlier on my Talk page too. rudra 21:14, 1 April 2007 (UTC) History of MathematicsThank you for your thought provoking comments. The problem, as I see it, is that there is already an academic discipline called "History of Mathematics", which is taught in almost every university, and for which there are large numbers of textbooks, mostly titled "History of Mathematics", or some varient thereof. They are written for mathematicians, not for historians, and usually have a calculus prerequisite. The area of study you are proposing, which could easily be called "History of Mathematics" if that term were not currently being used for the subject described above, needs a distinctive name of its own, since you are unlikely to change a tradition of long standing, and having two separate areas with the same name would be confusing to no purpose. Since looking at mathematics from the "outside" is often called metamathematics, I suggest "History of Metamathematics" for the study of what the forms and subject matter of mathematics were in various cultures. Rick Norwood 22:42, 3 April 2007 (UTC) I've added a comment to your draft page. Rick Norwood 13:18, 4 April 2007 (UTC) Boethius and the QuadriviumYou make it sound as if Boethius created/invented the quadrivium, as far as I understand it the use of the seven liberal arts,with the quadrivium, at the mediaevel university goes back to Boethius but the quadrivium itself goes back toArchytas. If you agree then I think you ought to make your statement somewhat clearer. However it would also mean that the Archytas article needs to be edited to include the fact that he defined the quadrivium.Thony C. 21:21, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
revert on scientific research on enlightmentPlease elaborate on your revert, you state that the section is not about alchemy, although the subject is enlightment, the philosofers stone and the holy grail (three very relevent subject connected to alchemy). The sources are indeed not independent, as they are means to express a view, it is not stated as a general accepted truth, it sources cleary state they are a certain point of view. This is indeed a controversial subject, so neutral sources will be very scarce. Please reconsider this edit Teardrop onthefire 14:37, 4 April 2007 (UTC) We're going with Random Edits for study 2Heya Steve. Just to let you know Study 2 settled on the Random Edits idea (which you supported). We're beginning to work out the procedure and structure of the study - I wanted to invite you in on the collaboration! (Notice new content on both the main Study 2 page and talkpage). Thanks for your help; its nice not being a team of just 3 anymore like it was for Study 1! :-) JoeSmack Talk 01:54, 9 April 2007 (UTC) Oh, and it looks like we have bot help too. JoeSmack Talk 02:05, 9 April 2007 (UTC) StablepediaHey Steve. I noticed you mentioned Stablepedia on Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/Newsroom/Suggestions, i am the creator of Stablepedia, and i was wondering if you have any comments or feedback regarding it. Thanks in advance ! -- Sinan Taifour 19:28, 9 April 2007 (UTC) Vandal taggingHi there; Steve, I notice that you have recently given some vandals a one-and-only warning, for clear vandalism but vandalism which is not attacking, offensive or on userpages. The existence of the vandalism is quite clear, so you are not wrong, but I personally find it easier to block these editors if I can see a reasonable series of warnings on their page. I will block a user on first vandalism if their edit warrants it, but not all do, and a sequence of warnings ({{test1}}, {{test2}}, {{test3}} and {{test4}} make the point with significant force, prevent successful appeal to WP:AN/I, and are on record for future reference.--Anthony.bradbury 22:09, 27 April 2007 (UTC) WikiProject History of Science newsletter : Issue II - May 2007The May 2007 issue of the WikiProject History of Science newsletter has been published. You're receiving this because you are a participant in the History of Science WikiProject. You may read the newsletter or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Yours in discourse--ragesoss 06:16, 5 May 2007 (UTC) HelpHi Steve I have a problem! If you go to my Sandbox you will see my work in progress, where I am expanding the mediaeval sections of the history of mathematics article. For some reason I have a blue dotted line box around one section of text 1400 - 1600 Algebra that I did not produce deliberately and that I can not get to go away! What did I do wrong and how do I correct it? Thony C. 20:20, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
Foot NotesSteve As you will have seen my rewrite is progressing, slowly but progressing. Soon I shall be adding footnotes and I have a question for you. For the first paragraph of the section Early Middle Ages I wish to give as references Lindberg's Beginnings of Western Science, Borst's The Ordering of Time and your Astronomies and Cultures. Is it OK if I reference your book here? By which I mean do you think that this short paragraph reflects the views expressed in your book? If not what should I change to meet this requirement? For Bede I shall of course reference Faith WallisThony C. 20:57, 14 May 2007 (UTC) Hi Steve, I thought I had left a post for you last week, but I guess I hadn't. I appreciated your comments in the RfC we had on the Indian Mathematics page in March, and I wanted to let you know that I have been revising the article (which had been in an abysmal state). You might want to take a look at it and offer some feedback. Regards, Fowler&fowler«Talk» 02:02, 27 May 2007 (UTC) Alhacen and Al-KindiHey Steve. Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I wasn't too sure about what other sources say on Alhacen's position on heliocentrism or Al-Kindi's position on gravity, besides what was written in Qadir's book. If there are other sources which suggest otherwise, then feel free to add their views to the articles. I'll have a look at them later and probably find out why Qadir's view might differ from theirs (it might have something to do with what manuscripts are being used). Jagged 85 10:12, 27 May 2007 (UTC) Re: Citation StyleHi Steve. I think you might be mistaken. I did cite the specific page numbers in the Latin translations of the 12th century article. Jagged 85 16:26, 5 June 2007 (UTC) mythsSteve, I think your statement is well-formed and fairly gentle: it has the proper focus on history and sources, invites sourced dissent, and avoids dwelling on any implicit ideological motives behind this class of bias. I don't see any problem with it.--ragesoss 16:53, 7 June 2007 (UTC) Quick one about ellipseJust wondering about these edits ( [3] ), especially why the book cited was an unreliable historical source- I understand that you didn't do it without any reason (lets face it, you're not new to this whole thing) it just confused me. Cheers, Jonomacdrones (talk) 16:22, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
A Message for you in Indian Astronomy Talk Page.Go there.VJha 12:33, 15 July 2007 (UTC) Hi, A lot of material was added to History of physics and I just finished integrating it. Can I ask you to take a look and make sure everything checks out? JFD 08:33, 24 July 2007 (UTC) template:who/Who?Hey - just to quickly introduce myself, I am the creator of Template:Who? - and I saw that you were recently in a discussion involving it and Template:who. Recently (just after the discussion), a request came up to merge the said templates, and I thought that since you had been involved, you might want to comment on. I've actually recommended a wording change, but feel free to ignore that for now :-D. Again, I just thought I'd give you a heads up, hope to see you around soon! --danielfolsom 23:58, 25 July 2007 (UTC) Meru-centricismCf. Talk page of Indian Astronomy. This article ( Indian astronomy ) is highly misleading. There are factual errors as well. Restructuring is also needed. Please help in proper sourcing of unsourced statements in this article. - Vinay Jha 12:35, 8 August 2007 (UTC) Indian AstronomyYou are interested in History of Science Project. At your insistence, I added a well sourced section "Merucentric Astronomy in Indian astronomy. A user Bharatveer reverted without discussing. See 'Discuss Before Reverting' in Talk:Indian astronomy. Some important and correct statements were also reverted, and references deleted. Please ask this user to discuss before reverting. History may contain wrong or unclear ideas, but we should not delete history. -- Vinay Jha 11:44, 19 August 2007 (UTC) WikiProject History of Science newsletter : Issue III - September 2007The September 2007 issue of the WikiProject History of Science newsletter has been published. You're receiving this because you are a participant in the History of Science WikiProject. You may read the newsletter or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Yours in discourse--ragesoss 00:52, 14 September 2007 (UTC) Common KnowlegeI was reading through the talk page of WP:CN and wanted to say that I enjoyed your comments. I was wondering if you would be interested in providing any hand-holding/encouragement/mentoring to a frustrated Princeton BA/London Business School MSc who believes in Wikipedia but is recently finding the level of discourse depressing. Until recently I've had a pretty easy ride through Wikipedia - probably because I've chosen topics of low interest. But recently I've taken interest in improving the quality of coverage of Progressive/Reform/Liberal Judaism. Instead of contributing substantive material, I've found myself spending an inordinate amount of time dealing with one editor who (in my opinion of course) doesn't seem to understand how to structure an argument and asserts "first hand" knowledge when in fact he can be directly contradicted by credible sources that were within easy reach. I realize Wikipedia is a big tent and editors have a wide range of academic training and scholarly maturity. One part of me thinks, "OK this is a challenge. Maybe this isn't just about the article. Maybe part of what I'm giving back here is my training in critical thinking. This is really no different than listening patiently to freshmen seminar students and helping them learn how to form a convincing argument for their ideas." The other part of me says. "Yikes! This topic really needs work and I don't have unlimited time. If I spend all my time arguing with people who are oblivious to their need to check their sources, then I won't have any time to research my own sources or make contributions of substance. Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. Egfrank 23:03, 27 September 2007 (UTC) FomenkoI'm really not sure what the best way to proceed is. Linkspam, though, can certainly be removed. Eventually, perhaps some action could be taken. If you want to try arbitration, or whatever, I'd be supportive, although I don't really have the time to take the lead on it. john k (talk) 06:44, 29 December 2007 (UTC) AspirinI'll do what I can with addressing your suggestions. I'm giving a lecture on the history of aspirin (or rather, the "biography" of aspirin) in the course I'm TAing this semester, "Magic Bullets and Wonder Pills: Making Drugs and Diseases in the 20th Century" (taught by Bruno Strasser). So I figure if I'm going to do all the work putting together the lecture, I might as well write it up for Wikipedia. Thanks!--ragesoss (talk) 22:47, 17 January 2008 (UTC) Can I just say...Thanks a bunch for your addition to Definition of planet. I've been wanting to expand the mediaeval section for years, but haven't known where to look. :-) Serendipodous 16:55, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
Do you think you could have a look at Planet's (premature, I think) FAC page? There's a strange debate evolving over the precise way to read this peculiar entry in the Online Etymology Dictionary for "Earth", which appears to refer to Earth as a "planet" since 1400. This can't be right, can it? Planets wander. Planets move. The Earth wasn't recognised as moving until the time of Galileo. Serendipodous 18:10, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
coordinator electionThe Wikiproject History is going to elect 3 coordinators. As a member you are invited to participate. Wandalstouring (talk) 12:22, 15 February 2008 (UTC) Speedy deletion of Template:User degree/PhD 2A tag has been placed on Template:User degree/PhD 2 requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section T3 of the criteria for speedy deletion, because it is a deprecated or orphaned template. After seven days, if it is still unused and the speedy deletion tag has not been removed, the template will be deleted. If the template is intended to be substituted, please feel free to remove the speedy deletion tag and please consider putting a note on the template's page indicating that it is substituted so as to avoid any future mistakes (<noinclude>{{transclusionless}}</noinclude>). Thanks. --MZMcBride (talk) 19:58, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
thank you for invitionya i have been makeing a lot of changes, and extravagent would be an understatemate for some of the claims being made, especially under islamic science, ie muslims formulated natural selection, started micrbiology, bacteriology, astrophysics, invented reciprocating piston engines and glasses, and well the list just goes on, whats next "islamic science" laid the foundations for quantum mechanics lol —Preceding unsigned comment added by Tomasz Prochownik (talk • contribs) 06:11, 4 March 2008 (UTC) Pan-american quarteringCould you remind me which paper you argued for pan-American quartering of the sky? I thought is would make a good example of one of the achievements of archaeoastronomy because it has both a cognitive and landscape aspect which you wouldn't really get without an archaeoastronomical perspective. I'm trying to avoid the Archaeoastronomy = Stonehenge (or possibly the Pyramids) cliché. Thanks. Alunsalt (talk) 00:40, 17 March 2008 (UTC)
SPS on ArchaeoastronomyI hope you have better things to do than read this over the Easter weekend. I didn't revert the odd claims that Kennewick man supported Fell's Ogham because I thought that it would just inflame him, but it seems to have made no difference. What I've done now is left a note regarding WP:SPS on breadh2o's talk page. I'll give him some time to see if he can make suitable changes. I'm not keen on simply counting the reverts as it's only going to push it into being more adversarial and it's not really a long term solution, especially if the article is to be GA. Alunsalt (talk) 15:28, 22 March 2008 (UTC) Fringe ArchaeoastronomyI agree that it would be a shame to try and put together a useful entry and then leave it to any wild ideas that come along. At the same time with things like the OCT and von Daniken being fairly well known it leaves a hole in the article if we ignore them. With OCT having its own entry I'd hope we can get by with a couple of sentences with wikilinks through to them without giving a lot of space to things which have nothing relevant to archaeoastronomy. I've also edited the Astrological Ages article so hopefully I've solved Terry McKinnell's problem. Currently the section Breadh2o has added to the fringe archaeoastronomy section cites Stanford's Solutrean Hypothesis thing and Lemonick and Dorfmann's TIME piece on Kennewick Man. I've asked him on his talk page if he can explain the connection to archaeoastronomy to me, because right now it just looks like the remnant of another Galileo Gambit. With that kind of citation record it's tempting to take an automatically entrenched position against him so I'm trying not to, while at the same time avoiding Stockholm Syndrome. I thought it would take some heat out of the discussion if I slowed down my responses but I'm not sure if that will help either. I'll be doing less again anyway. The reason I pushed on with the article was I had a lot of free time in small chunks while I waited to take people to and from hospital. Now I have longer periods of time I'd like to finally finish the thesis. I've been offered a free trip to the Polisario-held sector of Western Sahara when I finish to survey material there. It's not Hawaii but it's a start. :) Alunsalt (talk) 17:03, 24 March 2008 (UTC)
Time for an RfC?I was sketching out ideas for improving the methodology section, but I can't see the point if Breadh2o is going to keep disrupting the article. Is it time for an RfC on the user? I'm putting something together in my sandbox, but it'll take a while as i can't help thinking I could be using the time to do something useful instead. I'm tempted to wait for the Google Knol site to be opened up, or just stick a wiki on my own webserver and edit there. Alun Salt (talk) 14:35, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
Since you're someone who has taken an interest in this article, I'd like your take on what seems to be a problem. Mcorazao (talk · contribs) has created what's essentially a You're absolutely right about St. Boniface needing a citation. I remember this personally from two lengthy papers I did in graduate school on him (in an era which predates the Internet, however). I'll try to dig up an online reference. The other theologians I cited already have Wiki entries verifying their views, I believe. Regarding Bosch, he's hardly the only Medieval artist to depict a flat earth. And The Garden of Earthly Delights *does* fall into the Middle Ages, if only by a decade. Also, I'm not sure why you added talk suggesting I deleted material from the entry. I merely added these references. The Flat Earth article does a fairly decent job of conveying the fact that, while many Medieval scholars did in fact realize the earth was round, that a strong undercurrent of flat earth sentiment persisted among theologians and the uneducated. The Myth of the Flat Earth page, however, reads more like Christian Apologia, and in its original form, leaves the reader with the mistaken few that no one at all during the period believed such. This is what I'm trying to clear up. Regards, FellGleaming (talk) 01:17, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
FellGleaming (talk) 14:59, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
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