User talk:Wesley R. ElsberryI don't know if you are still active, but just a head's up: I used your draft to make an article for TalkOrigins_Archive. It is almost identical to your earlier version but incorporates a list of awards and recognition for the archive. JoshuaZ 02:47, 22 February 2006 (UTC) Thanks. I felt that I could contribute a draft, but that Wikipedians should look it over and fix it up for use. -- WRE Hi Wesley. I just wanted to thank you for your very helpful comments on the bottlenose dolphin talk page. If you haven't already begin doing, you should feel to correct the article directly in cases like this - i.e. in cases where you are familiar with the literature and confident of your own correctness. Thanks again for your contributions. Pcb21 Pete 12:06, 22 March 2006 (UTC) SternbergWhile this is arguably an exceptional case(given the nature of the issue at hand), WP:V frowns highly upon the use of blogs such as Panda's Thumb as sourcing, so it would be helpful if we had other sources that said the same thing (possibly the NCSE?). JoshuaZ 14:21, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
I'd like to send you an email but your Wikipedia email is not enabled, would you mind enabling it and/or is there some other way to obtain your email address? JoshuaZ 17:18, 30 March 2006 (UTC) Universal probability boundI made some changes to the Universal probability bound article. Still more work needs to be done but I think the proper context of statistical mechanics was missing from article. Please have a look and feel free to change it.--CSTAR 05:24, 9 April 2006 (UTC) "dB SPL" is an invalid unitNumerous articles in Wikipedia are using an invalid acoustic "unit", variously specified as "dB SPL", "dBSPL", and "dB(SPL)". There may be other variants. Affected articles include decibel, sound pressure, sound pressure level, and audiogram. But the full range of articles with the problem can best be seen by search for each specific variant. Such a search on "dB SPL" returns 21 Wikipedia articles. The guidelines given for the US National Standards clearly excludes the use of "dB SPL". See the ASACOS Rules for Preparation of American National Standards in ACOUSTICS, MECHANICAL VIBRATION AND SHOCK, BIOACOUSTICS, and NOISE, which states:
The use of "dB SPL", as shown above by an authoritative source, is wrong. The incorrect use is common in Wikipedia articles, and it is a problem. I've been leaving a message in the talk sections of various articles that need to have this fixed. An attempted edit to begin correction of the decibel article was reverted to the incorrect usage. The treatment of sound pressure level is inconsistent with standard reference works across Wikipedia. Both Kinsler and Frey's "Fundamentals of Acoustics" (2nd edition) and Robert Urick's "Principles of Underwater Sound" (3rd edition) indicate that a measured intensity is a level (Urick p.15) or sound pressure level (K&F) relative to a reference effective pressure (K&F pp.125-126). Both of these sources recommend reporting decibels with an explicit listing of the reference effective pressure, like so: "74 dB re 20 micropascals", where the number and units following re is the reference effective pressure. Level or sound pressure level in both these standard texts simply refer to a measurement in the sound field and are not indications of a specific reference pressure upon which the decibel is based. In other words, "dB SPL" is an invalid means of attempting to refer to the in-air reference effective pressure. In no article thus far have I seen the "dB SPL" usage tied to an authoritative source. By contrast, the "dB re" formalism is common to both standard reference works that I have cited, and is explicitly excluded in the work laying out the format for the national standards. Other sites using the "dB re" formalism: Oceans of Noise (explicit in defining SPL and SIL in terms of "dB re"), SURTASS LFA, NIST listing SPL in terms of "dB re", and Acoustic Impacts on Marine Mammals. On the decibel page, an edit lists having entered a better reference for use of "dB SPL". This "better reference" for use of "dB SPL" added to the decibel article ends up being a document that merely includes "dB SPL" in a list of terms. The glossary within the same document does not even list this supposed unit, even though weighted decibel terms are defined. The glossary in the file does have an entry for "sound pressure level", which is
Notice that the unit specified is "dB", not "dB SPL". The inclusion of "dB SPL" in the list of terms does not establish that that usage is correct, and even their own reference of the ANSI standard indicates that their usage is incorrect. SPL refers to a measurement, and is not an indication of the reference effective pressure. The ANSI standard referenced makes this clear, as SPL is defined as being used for other reference effective pressures, too. (Note: The ANSI standard itself is not something I have on hand; I am relying on the quoted glossary in the referenced link. I did check and found another page that claims to have extracted that text without modification from the ANSI standard, and it matches. To get the PDF of the ANSI standard, one would have to pay $150.) A reasonable question to ask is why, if the term is incorrect, does Wikipedia have so many articles that use it? Since SPL is a useful concept, people do report measurements of various SPLs. I think that the shorthand way that this may commonly be done (and which the writing guideline above warns against and the ANSI standard contradicts) would be to say, "We recorded a 74 dB SPL at 10 meters from the sound source," rather than, "We recorded a sound pressure level of 74 dB at 10 meters from the sound source," or the complete, "We recorded a sound pressure level of 74 decibels re 20 micropascals at 10 meters from the sound source," which is unambiguous. If one uses the shortcut of the first example a lot, one may become erroneously convinced that the actual unit of measurement is a "dB SPL". This may be more common among people who do all their acoustic work using only one assumed reference effective pressure. Within a particular community, actually writing out each measurement with the reference effective pressure indicated may appear to be redundant and a waste of space and time. Because reference effective pressures have changed in the past, published reports that failed to specify which one corresponded to a particular measurement has made comparison to modern measurements ambiguous, and thus unreliable. If the "dB SPL" problem is going to be fixed, we must have some agreement among those who regularly contribute to the acoustics articles on Wikipedia that there really is a problem here. The incorrect usage is otherwise too pervasive in existing Wikipedia articles to risk starting edit wars that will simply waste people's time. Wesley R. Elsberry 21:05, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
Welcome!Hey, welcome to Wikipedia! I'm an administrator here, so if you ever need any covert EAC work done you can contact me through the usual backchannels. Seeya around. --Cyde Weys 23:36, 11 April 2006 (UTC) Hovind dissertationHi, I noticed your comments on the Kent Hovind page in which you wrote "Yes, NCSE does have a copy of Hovind's dissertation. I have seen it..." Is there any web source or magazine article that I can reference the NCSE as having a copy available for viewing from the public? It needs to be sourced in the article. Arbusto 07:56, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
How about if you can't put the whole thing on the web, then a photo or two from far out enough that you can't read it properly but you can still see the stuff stuck in with glue stick with like artistic merit. Paul A. Newman 12:38, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
TOA hacking & googleWow. Some of those people who posted comments are amazingly rude jerks. Guettarda 20:25, 4 December 2006 (UTC) Dembski photoTo be usable by Wikipedia you need to release it under an appropriate free license (GFDL, CC-by-SA, etc.) Assuming that you are the copyright holder, it would be best for you to upload the image either here at the English Wikipedia (via Special:Upload) or at Wikimedia Commons (via commons:Special:Upload) where it would be available for use in all Wikimedia projects. Make sure to tag the images appropriately when you upload them. Guettarda 17:49, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Dembski's Christmas Present to his criticsWes, can you name who Dembski sent the christmas present email to? If it was his critics then I think an argument could be made it belongs in the response to critics section. See my latest comments on the Dembski talk page. There’s a Christmas present for you at www.overwhelmingevidence.com – a flash animation that features each of you prominently (some of you are probably aware of it already Cheers! Mr Christopher 21:13, 18 December 2006 (UTC) Genetic Recombination Information IssueWesley, I am bringing this debate over to your talk page as instructed by Wikipedia guidelines regarding dispute resolution. Firstly, I would advise you to read the Guidelines for Vandalism. You may find that your edits (or Phippard's) fit the definition much better than my edits. I'm sure you would not want that to be the case. Also, let me point out to you the Wikipedia policy for dispute resolution:
As instructed by Wikipedia policy, I improved the article by adding to it and making it more clear. You, (or your friend Phippard) however, simply reverted the article because you disagreed with my added sentence, in violation of the Wikipedia policy just mentioned. Then you insinuate that I am a vandal, not to mention that you did it publicly on the Article Discussion page. The reason you gave for reverting it was
I gave an excellent, recognized reference supporting the idea that existing genetic information is merely reshuffled. I suppose your statement of "no substantiation" refers to the definition of "information"? Are you telling me you are unfamiliar with Dr. Thomas Schneider and his discussions of biological information. Surely you are aware of these? If not, I will furnish references for you. Afdave 02:31, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
Your portrait photoHi, we have a policy which restricts fair use images solely to articles (mainly to comply with US Copyright Policy, not because we're all misers) so I was hoping you could supply a freely licenced replacement for use in your article and for use on your userspace. Best Wishes -- Nick t 00:37, 30 April 2007 (UTC)
RE: Your articleI have reverted it again to my version (which I know is unvandalised) and protected it for five days to prevent all these sweeping changes, mass content deletion and attack paragraphs. I have left a comment on the talk page that you ought to read also. Kind regards, SGGH speak! 18:08, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Holy cowYou are THE Wesley R. Elsberry? I just wrote about you in an article (the new Tara C. Smith article.--Filll 21:28, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
Please comment on AfdPlease see Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/NCSE_Grand_Canyon_Raft_Trip and the associated article NCSE Grand Canyon Raft Trip. 21:47, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
photo problem?You might want to provide input at [1]. --Filll 16:22, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
Excellent work, thanks for the Image:Dembski head shot 2.jpg. The dual GNU/CC by SA licence is fully acceptable and recommended, though personally I'm unsure if GNU requires attribution, so I go for CC by SA on its own, but that's not a standard option now. Only quibble: this image can now be uploaded to the Commons for use in other projects i.e. Wikipedia in other languages etc., and it's helpful to upload to the Commons in the first place to save this having to be done later. You have to open an account to do so, it's no different from opening a Wikipedia account and you can use your own name or a pseudonym if you prefer. The instructions as you click through to upload an image are slightly clearer on the people point – Step one asks for "Photographs or videos you have created of: ... people that are either public figures or are taken at public events", and the Other tips includes "Compromising or embarrassing images of non-public people taken without their knowledge are often problematic. Use good judgment." So, unless Dembski is not a public figure AND it wasn't at a public event AND it's embarrassing, there should be no problem. There's more detailed guidance and a help desk, but that seems pretty straightforward. Further images will be much appreciated. .. dave souza, talk 10:47, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
Thanks, WesHi: Chris Ho-Stuart here. Nice to see you active at Wikipedia. I've been involved in a range of matters here. I got your message, expect to hear from me again shortly! Cheers —Duae Quartunciae (talk · cont) 10:49, 21 August 2007 (UTC) Need your inputTake a look at [2]. Thanks.--Filll 01:08, 29 August 2007 (UTC) John (Angus) CampbellWhile updating the John Angus Campbell article, I noticed that the reference cited says that his deposition was scheduled for June 2, 2006. Seems a trifle late to me, so have amended the article. It would be good if the reference was updated ;) .. dave souza, talk 09:45, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
Incorrect info about PTIt might be helpful if you would add a note on PT or on your personal blog that the claim is wrong. Then we can cite that as a specific debunking of the claim. JoshuaZ (talk) 04:15, 23 November 2007 (UTC)
Help with a sourceThe Dembski article needs a source for the following passage: "Wesley R. Elsberry contacted the person in charge of the The Design Inference manuscript at Cambridge University Press, who declined to describe what a normal review process at Cambridge University Press consisted of." Cheers. FeloniousMonk (talk) 06:19, 6 December 2007 (UTC)
Photo of William A. DembskiPlease upload the image to Commons, so that we can use it in the others Wikis. Thanks--Domingo Portales (talk) 18:39, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
Merry ChristmasThanks very much! Happy New Year to you! -- Wesley R. Elsberry (talk) 11:40, 29 December 2007 (UTC) Do you know of any reviews of this yet, both positive and negative? The natives are getting restless about deleting or merging this article (which I do not want to do unless forced), and I think the book is so new there is not much out there yet. Any ideas?--Filll (talk) 17:36, 30 January 2008 (UTC) Kitzmiller & Judge Jones's memorandaDr. Elsberry, I am not sure if you read the talk page before you edited. I disagree with you that there was any POV-pushing in the statement you edited, particularly the way I rephrased it, since my POV and yours are in fact the same. Remember that part of the "wedge" strategy is to claim that the pro-science community has something to hide. Your edit could be interpreted as an act consistent with someone who is trying to hide the truth. That does not make our side look better. Non Curat Lex (talk) 23:29, 2 February 2008 (UTC) I didn't broach it, and I thought they did source it! I just rewrote it to avoid POV. As for sharing a side... in the abstract, I suppose it is creepy, but this is evolution we're talking about, not a family tree. How many sides can reasonable people take? I would say one and a half at most. Non Curat Lex (talk) 08:23, 3 February 2008 (UTC). The AustringerDont you think we should have a short stub on this weblog, given that we seem to be using it as a source more and more often? After all, Panda's Thumb and Pharyngula and several other prominent blogs have their own articles. Comments?--Filll (talk) 12:56, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
No I like it. If other people want to add more they can. I just want to start with something since we seem to be using it more and more often. Thanks.--Filll (talk) 14:33, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Your name personally is in the media a lot, but I have only found one instance of it tied to The Austringer so far. That is the Cheri Yecke matter.--Filll (talk) 21:24, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Excellent. Thanks. Any more?--Filll (talk) 01:33, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
ExpelledThanks for helping here. One of the troublesome bits about this article is that so much of the commentary is coming from blogs, which aren't normally sufficient for WP:V purposes. The more multi-dimensional, and ideologically independent, the publisher for reference sources used, the less arbitrary the editorial judgment...both the notability of the commentary and the objectivity can be better measured with independent publications. Your help in expanding the body of attributable refs would be most helpful. Professor marginalia (talk) 06:58, 31 March 2008 (UTC) NOC the whaleThanks for your offer to help improve the NOC (whale) article! I'm not a biologist and I only learned about NOC when the story exploded in the news the other day, so I would appreciate input from an expert. I'm planning on doing some more work on it tonight, as I think the article can still be expanded based on the sources already in the article. But if you know of other published research projects about NOC, obviously it would be great if we could draw on those too. This might be too much to ask, but since you apparently know Sam Ridgway, I wonder if he has any photos of NOC that he would be willing to donate? Anyway, thanks again. Braincricket (talk) 19:11, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
In case this could interest youThere used to be a section on software simulation at evidence of common descent (that is also arguably mostly an evidence of evolution article). This section mentioned Avida (here's the now-removed material). A small consensus to remove it was formed during a discussion (its archive) resulting from the addition of (invalid and reverted) creationist arguments (the creationism promotion). Several editors including myself concluded that it would be good to have a section on evidence by simulations, albeit it would have to not only rely on primary sources/papers. Some also expressed that the input of experts would help. If you know of such secondary sources and would like to comment at Talk:Evidence of common descent to suggest links and/or quotes (in relation to Avida or other simulations used to support, demonstrate or test evidence), it would be most appreciated. Thanks in advance, —PaleoNeonate – 10:08, 13 September 2020 (UTC) Civility, no personal attacksWesley, may I remind you of the mandatory Wikipedia policies WP:CIVIL and WP:NPA. It is fine to hold any view on an article talk page provided that does not extend to attacking other editors. Such behaviour as you exhibited with this edit will not be tolerated and must not be repeated. An apology would be appreciated. All the best, Chiswick Chap (talk) 08:10, 4 July 2021 (UTC)
Generative AII wasn't sure exactly where to note an opinion, but it seems like my talk page is appropriate. I've been using generative AI (OpenAI's ChatGPT mostly) and have found it extremely helpful in getting work done in both analysis and coding. That leads me to an observation that I think will hold true: Generative AI is going to democratize expertise like bullets democratized soldiers. It is that important a development in my opinion. Wesley R. Elsberry (talk) 18:36, 15 January 2023 (UTC) Weirdness at GoodReadsThere's an author page at GoodReads for a 'Wesley Elsberry'. GoodReads page for Wesley Elsberry As of this morning, it displays five titles supposedly authored by 'Wesley Elsberry', none of which I've had anything to do with, and all of which apparently are on the topic of excessive alcohol consumption. Doing a check of the titles, several are titles of actual books, but those books are by other authors (i.e., not by any 'Wesley Elsberry' at all). A check of Archive.org says that the author page has not been archived. I infer that this must be a relatively recent addition to the GoodReads site. Adding books to an author's page requires a 'librarian' role for an account at GoodReads, so it seems like someone had to get some sort of credentials accepted there in order to do this. Also, the 'cover art' images were generated to show 'Wesley Elsberry' prominently in the images. This seems pretty elaborate and labor-intensive for someone to do as a prank. I am mystified as to both who might have done this and why. I have done the 'report an account' thing for the 'Wesley Elsberry (of excessive alcohol consumption)' account, noting the erroneous information entered there. I also added a review for the 'Swimming With Crocodiles by Wesley Elsberry' book entry noting the problems with the page. Wesley R. Elsberry (talk) 17:44, 18 July 2023 (UTC)
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