Talk:List of articles every Wikipedia should have/Archives/2023
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Spiritual Proposals
[edit]Hey everyone, I have some spiritual proposals. I hope we can reach consensus on them. I searched the archives for these terms, and only found minor discussion, with no formal proposals.
Add Reincarnation, Remove Yoga
[edit]Swapped with enough support (support : 6, neutral : 1, no opposition) |
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The Indian religions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, are all known for their belief in reincarnation (Sikhism's interpretation is debated). However, reincarnation is also seen in the belief systems of the Druze, Kabballah Jews, Gnostics, Ghulats, Inuit, Yoruba, Spiritists, Wiccans, Scientologists, Yazidis, and in the metempsychosis of the Ancient Greeks. Yoga is a Hindu/Buddhist/Jain spiritual practice, introduced to the West as a form of exercise. So, its popularity isn't really as spiritual or as pervasive in cultures worldwide as the belief in reincarnation.
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Add Shinto, Remove Zen
[edit]Swapped with enough support (support : 5, neutral : 1, no opposition) |
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Shinto is the ancient Japanese religion that eventually merged with Buddhism. It has received over twice the views on English Wikipedia in the past 30 days than Zen. Support
Neutral
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Add Discrimination, Remove Universal Declaration of Human Rights
[edit]Swapped with enough support (support : 5, opposition : 2) |
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Add Catherine the Great, Remove Peter the Great
[edit]Nomination withdrawn; Consensus to keep Peter |
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I've copied this response written by User:Grnrchst, from the English Vitals page, about Catherine the Great, where she is listed as Vital-3: "Catherine was one of the pivotal examples of an "Enlightened absolutist", during a period of great renewal in Russian culture and learning that we today know as the Russian Enlightenment. She ruled at the height of Russian imperial expansionism, overseeing the completion of the conquest of Siberia, the annexation of Crimea, the Russian colonisation of Ukraine, the partition of Poland and the establishment of the Pale of Settlement, all of which still have had vast measurable consequences up to this very day. Her doubling down on the system of serfdom arguably also set the seeds for the Russian Revolutions. She also established Europe's first public education program for women. I'm not sure by what metric she's being judged as less vital than Elizabeth I (a medieval monarch) or Joan of Arc (a medieval foot soldier). Catherine has inarguably had a massive effect on history." I think she belongs here as well in place of Peter the Great. Here are the facts: -- Both are Russian leaders -- Both are known by the epithet "the Great" -- One is female and one is male. On one hand, we don't want gender bias, per discussion on adding more women above, which supports this swap. On the other hand, I genuinely feel every proposal to help with gender bias is going to be shot down by what is, essentially, the gender bias. In the end, focusing on genders may lead to subjective feelings. How do we combat this? The only answer I have is the objective measure: view counts. -- Catherine the Great receives more than double the view counts than Peter the Great: she received ~230,000 views in the past 30 days on English Wikipedia compared to Peter's ~97,000 views. On Russian Wikipedia, she Catherine has also received ~230,000 views in the past 30 days, compared to Peter's ~156,000 views. To me, this is the objective measure that points to her being more vital. However we'll still have to see what the consensus is. Support
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DiscussionPeter laid the foundational groundwork of the Russian Empire, and Catherine continued his work to turn Russia into a great and cultural power. Both are important to the history of Russia, to the point where it is debated who is more important. Both leaders are also known for bad things they have done. Peter's English Wikipedia page calls him "harsh and autocratic" in the first paragraph, while in a discussion on adding more women above, User:Tuvbif points out some bad things about Catherine. I don't know who is more "bad" than the other, and there is no consensus on whether we want to avoid placing people who are "more bad" on the list. LightProof1995 (talk) 04:07, 18 February 2024 (UTC)
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Add Catherine the Great, Remove Anton Chekhov
[edit]Nomination withdrawn; Consensus to not de-list a Russian writer when we have more British writers listed |
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"Catherine was one of the pivotal examples of an "Enlightened absolutist", during a period of great renewal in Russian culture and learning that we today know as the Russian Enlightenment. She ruled at the height of Russian imperial expansionism, overseeing the completion of the conquest of Siberia, the annexation of Crimea, the Russian colonisation of Ukraine, the partition of Poland and the establishment of the Pale of Settlement, all of which still have had vast measurable consequences up to this very day. Her doubling down on the system of serfdom arguably also set the seeds for the Russian Revolutions. She also established Europe's first public education program for women. I'm not sure by what metric she's being judged as less vital than Elizabeth I (a medieval monarch) or Joan of Arc (a medieval foot soldier). Catherine has inarguably had a massive effect on history." Catherine also built The Hermitage, which is the second-largest art museum in the world. Support
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DiscussionWe have three leaders (Peter, Lenin, and Stalin), not two.--Reprarina (talk) 08:40, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
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Remove Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria, Add African Great Lakes and Wetland
[edit]Nomination withdrawn; Creating two separate proposals |
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No individual lake is more important than the concept of a wetland. Wetlands are seen worldwide: the floodplains along the Nile and Amazon, the swamps in the Sundarbans and American South, and the bogs in Siberia and Ireland are all wetlands. Being neither truly aquatic or terrestrial, wetlands are a biome of their own. Because of this, wetlands provide unique ecological benefits not seen in other biomes. Wetlands also protect coasts, purify water, and restore groundwater reservoirs. Support
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DiscussionI don't know what is more important, wetland or meadow or plain.--Reprarina (talk) 10:03, 29 February 2024 (UTC)
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Numbers adjusted
[edit]Hello! It have been a good ride, but the numbers in every section are now right. For a while, I had 1001 items and I was turning crazy. Theklan (talk) 14:20, 6 March 2023 (UTC)
Articles that are popular in big wikis
[edit]I generated a list of articles that are popular in 10 big wikis, the list is based in the pageviews and consider all articles that have number of pageviews above the average in 10 wikis. Maybe it can help in some way to choose the articles that every Wikipedia should have. Danilo.mac talk 20:59, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- It seems like many articles on that list are of topics that have gained a lot of media attraction the last months. I think this list should contain topics that remain relevant over the years. Boivie (talk) 07:31, 28 August 2023 (UTC)
- I agree, it should be used as a separate list. — Yerpo Eh? 10:43, 28 August 2023 (UTC)