Talk:After Virtue

Latest comment: 5 years ago by FreeKnowledgeCreator in topic Francis Wheen material

How do people feel about this book?

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I'm curious to know how people feel about this book. I myself have just began reading it, and while I find it difficult, and often times a struggle to comprehend, the parts that I am able to follow I find amazing. I was hoping that anyone who has read it would like to share their thoughts on Macintyre's thesis. Afterall, this book deserves to be discussed.

Hi, anonymous user. Firstly, it might be worth you creating a Wikipedia account. It is quick, easy, absolutely not a security risk and means communication is easier. It also helps you become a part of the Wikipedia community quicker. If you do, you can sign a name and date stamp using four ~s in a row. Anyway, to your actual query. I created the page, because I like you think it is a book that deserves to be discussed. I read it first about a year ago, and was baffled by some of it (he assumes a level of background knowledge that is a bit above me, and a lot of the stuff about the Weberian society was fascinating but I could not see where it fitted into the whole scheme), and totally bowled over by other bits. His centre thesis (I think) is that post-Enlightenment moral thinking is dominated by the question "how can I do good" (and even that is reduced to "how can I do what I think is good" by Emotivism). The real question for MacIntyre is "how can I be good", ie the Aristotelian Virtue Ethics approach. What do you think? A discussion of the book would be good, not only for its own sake but also so that we can add to the article. Glad you enjoyed it, and hope you like Wikipedia! Batmanand 23:52, 27 July 2005 (UTC)Reply

Value of ON content and quality of reference

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The content added from the ON reference remains in this article, but the reference has been removed. This action is disputed and a conversation is ongoing here. Uriah923 06:13, 2 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

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I added the entire 'synopsis' section from information I gleaned from [1]. While it is not a peer reviewed journal or a textbook (and therefore possibly not worthy of being a reference), the article does have significat content up and above what is included here concerning the topics in the book. Are any opposed to adding it as an external link? Uriah923 16:32, 12 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

I would think that the content - if it can be proven it is not copyrighted - is of sufficient quality to quote as a reference. The only concern I have is that surely we are simply linking to a copy of the article? Batmanand 17:19, 12 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
I'll say pretty much the same thing here as I did at Talk:ITunes. This is just one out of a SEO campaign by the ON people to get links to that site from Wikipedia. (Just as we don't need the above link since it can be seen in the diff where it was removed) The same thing was done with multiple Wikipedia articles until people cried foul, and the consensus was that ON articles do not make the type of quality references Wikipedia needs. That said, if a consensus forms here (with a reasonable minimum of 5-6 people involved) that the article is valuable enough to justify an external link despite the linkspam implications, I certainly wouldn't stand in the way. That said, our article would be much better off using actual highly regarded references than linking to a website with no inherent credibility. Wikipedia:Verifiability is the goal, not seeing how many links we can get to ON. - Taxman Talk 18:33, September 12, 2005 (UTC)

We have three users here already. My vote is that the page is worthy of an external link (not a reference). Batmanand and Taxman - agree or disagree? Uriah923 18:51, 12 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

It's not a question of whether or not the page is worthy -- the link is not worthy. Omit link. Zora 21:06, 12 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
Again, are you listening to my question? Are you even reading the posts? There is not link on the page to omit, so what are you talking about? I am suggesting a link be added in an external links section. Uriah923 21:33, 12 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
I have read the ON linkspam stuff, and see the point, however in this case I think the information added to the page is both correct and substantive. Thus in principle I support it being added as a link. However, given that the page is pretty much a rewrite of where it would link to, would we just be "proving" that someone else had written this information before? So far, I withhold my vote. I would be inclined to vote with Uriah923; however I must first be satisfied that this is not a copyright infringement. Incidentlally, if it is, the information on the Wikipedia page needs a substantive rewrite to not fall foul of copyright too. Batmanand 09:32, 13 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
Yes, if it is a rewrite of what was in the ON link without incorporating other sources and without changing it enough it is a copyright violation. If it has been changed a lot, then the changes basically amount to original research which isn't allowed here. If the information is correct as you say, then it should be able to be substantiated by other, higher quality published sources, and then we have no problems. We don't need external links just for the sake of them. They serve the purpose of either linking to the most prominent, important websites on a topic or as a very weak form of citation/referencing. Wikipedia is long past the stage where it needs just any content added with weak references. Beyond that is the fact that Uriah's actions are so obviously just part of an SEO campaign. We need to discourage the use of Wikipedia to promote other people's sites, and that is very clearly in Wikipedia:External links#What should not be linked to. Basically I suggest the link isn't needed anyway, and is damaging if it is included. - Taxman Talk 12:05, 13 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
I'm sick of Uriah's SEO spamming. As it stands, his account seems little more than a Wikipedia:Role account, with the purpose of pimping traffic to his blog. He seems to have put a link to ON on every single topic he's ever written about. He presents his arguments as an "objective" look, but he is supporting the inclusion of all ON links on all of the articles so far! I oppose all ON links at this time. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 19:55, 13 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
OK I think I am now convinced that the ON stuff is merely an attempt to get more links to his site and thus is basically tantamount to SEO spamming. Thus I change my original vote to Oppose. The question of how to deal with the content of the page if we think that ON is suspect is something we will have to discuss in due course. Batmanand 16:16, 14 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

Francis Wheen and the tone of the article

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Just thought i'd add that I recently read Francis Wheen's 'How mumbo-jumbo conquered the world', in which he savages this book for its reactionary and atavistic stance. Persmer143.167.142.210 15:24, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

I have no opinion on whether that specific criticism should be include, but I do think the general tone of the page needs to read a little less like a MacIntyre fan page. The book is indeed "highly regarded" (as the intro states) by many people, but it's also poorly regarded by others. To a large extent, what people think of the book is influenced by what they think of virtue ethics more generally. --Delirium 12:29, 26 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
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I added proper notation to all of the links included in the text. Also, I added a hidden external links section. It's hidden because it would violate NPOV for me to add the link, but I think it's worthy of listing. So, if you happen along and find it, please check it out and un-hide it if you agree. uriah923(talk) 18:34, 1 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Seriously, don't go back to the same old games and prove for sure that the only reason you're still here is to substantiate links to your site. It wasn't NPOV that prevents adding the link, it's disruption. - Taxman Talk 12:56, 26 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
Agreed, we went over this a few months ago. Let's just keep the references removed. I think that was the consensus then, as now. Batmanand | Talk 15:11, 26 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Most important text?

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The sentence "After Virtue is the most important text in the recent revival of virtue ethics" seems too POV for a wiki article. I would also question this claim in that MacIntyre does away with an essential part of virtue ethics in his rejection of Aristotle's "metaphysical biology." I know of few virtue ethicists who would take such an extremely social stance on human nature.

I see what you're getting at: the claim "most important" does imply the exercise of judgment. But I think NPOV doesn't exclude all exercises of judgment. The article doesn't claim that After Virtue is the best book on virtue ethics, or even a good book, which certainly would be out of bounds. But it does claim that this book is the most important text in the revival of virtue ethics, which is a historical claim, and a well-founded one, I think. After Virtue didn't start the revival, true; but it was the most widely read, the most commonly responded to, and remains the subject of engagement today. This is true irrespective of his attitudes towards Aristotelian biology-- even if others have failed to follow him along exactly the same lines, this book's historical influence remains. So I'm comfortable with the judgment standing.
And by the way, is it really true that, as you imply, most virtue ethicists today embrace Aristotle's biology? That sounds like a much more contentious claim than the one you're taking issue with.Talented Mr Miller 14:23, 19 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Its not that virtue ethicists today would accept Aristotle's particular understanding of human nature and, by consequence, his table of virtues- but rather that they are willing to pursue the virtues via an understanding of man qua animal, which MacIntyre rejects. That is, the project of virtue ethics today is not just the uncovering of one's social roles and an embodiment of the excellences which one's social narrative provides as MacIntyre conceives of it in After Virtue. Most contemporary virtue ethicists would object to such a socially situated view of human nature and instead favor a return to the Aristotelian project of examining the essential nature of man. It seems to me that MacIntyre is more important in the development of communitarian philosophy for which his virtue ethics was tailored. Besides, GEM Anscombe wrote the article "Modern Moral Philosophy" in 1958 and Philippa Foot, Virtues and Vices in 1978, which it seems to me, are the works that really kicked things off for contemporary virtue ethics.

Anscombe in 1958 and Foot in 1978? That's a long lead time in getting things "kicked off"!
Removing tongue from cheek, I'd again assert that MacIntyre's book was more widely influential and remains so; look at amount of scholarly response, and amount of interest outside the academy. Or look at respective sales at Amazon and such. However one may feel about the book's merit, its influence still seems to me to be greater than its rivals.
That said, I'm still going to amend the opening line to "among the most important texts", and we'll see if anyone feels strongly enough to change it back.Talented Mr Miller 14:52, 3 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Chapter Summary

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I'm a researcher who's currently reading this book for the second time, and I'm writing a chapter summary as I go along, both for my own purposes and for the use of other researchers who want help dealing with this dense and difficult but significant book. I'm writing it up on my own private wiki, but am considering integrating it with this article when I'm done. I think it would be tremendously useful, but I'm writing it at a higher level of detail than is typical for Wikipedia articles, and thought I'd check here first for peoples' opinions on whether this would be appropriate to include. Here is a sample summary. Let me know what you all think. Ario (talk) 03:21, 17 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Chapter 2. The Nature of Moral Disagreement Today and the Claims of Emotivism

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MacIntyre notes that the nature of most moral discourse today is interminable disagreement. He lists several examples of common moral arguments on the subjects of just war, abortion, and medical licensing and regulation (6-7), and notes three salient characteristics of these debates: First, though each argument presented is logically valid, the respective concepts they use are incommensurable, so that there is no apparent rational way to decide in favor of one argument over another, and thus such a decision has the appearance of being personal and non-rational; Second, that despite the necessity of some impersonal and non-rational choice, the arguments all purport to be impersonal and rational, in that they "presuppose ... the existence, independently of the preferences or attitude of speaker and hearer, of standards [of morality]" (9); And third, that the concepts employed for each argument have been divorced from larger theories and contexts of which they were originally a part, and in some cases the concepts (such as virtue, justice, and ought) have changed meaning over time so that the evaluative expressions themselves have also changed their meanings. If these characteristics are symptoms of moral disorder, he argues, then it should be possible to construct a history of moral discourse in which, at an earlier stage, moral utterance is not regarded "simultaneously and inconsistently ... as [both] an exercise of our rational powers and as mere expressive assertion" (11). He notes that a major obstacle to this goal is today's unhistorical treatment of moral philosophy as a single debate among contemporaries examining the same exact subject matter, rather than as a progressing series of traditions among philosophers working in distinct historical contexts.

Forestalling the discussion of such a history, MacIntyre first explores the question of whether moral discussion is in fact rationally interminable not as a contingent feature of our culture, but because that is the inherent nature of moral questions. He specifically addresses emotivism, which "is the doctrine that all evaluative judgments and more specifically all moral judgments are nothing but expressions of preference, expressions of attitude or feeling" (11-12, his emphasis throughout). He notes that emotivism purports to be a theory about the meaning of sentences used in moral utterance. Prominent emotivists have asserted that the sentence "This is good" means the same as "I approve of this, do so as well" or "Hurrah for this!", but MacIntyre argues that these examples make clear that "the expression of feeling or attitude is characteristically a function not of the meaning of sentences, but of their use on particular occasions" (13). Emotivism is thus not a theory of the meaning of moral utterances, as it purports to be, but rather of their use. MacIntyre then traces the history of emotivism, arguing that it in fact arose in its modern form as a theory of the usage of moral utterances in a specific period: at Cambridge in the early 20th century. He then argues that emotivism has existed in other historical periods, and that it arises as a response to the breakdown of the project of providing rational justification for objective and impersonal moral claims. He argues finally that emotivism rests upon a claim that all historical attempts to provide such a justification have failed.

'Criticism' section (Wheen and Scialabba)

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Sorry - not sure how to comment correctly, but I think the 'criticism' section in this article is of negative influence on the article's quality. There have, of course, been critical responses to 'After Virtue', but neither Wheen nor Scialabba can be counted amongst serious critics of the book. Including only these two instances makes the entire section appear very arbitrary. Until there is better content for the 'criticism' section, I think it should be omitted in its entirety.155.245.57.127 (talk) 23:14, 15 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Before I added the Criticism section, the article was taking heat for being too much of a Macintyre fan page. So I think the section should stand. I'm not sure what you mean when you say that neither Wheen and Scialabba count as "serious critics"; is this because neither is a professional philosopher? In any case, the best course of action IMHO is to add to the section rather than omit it. I don't doubt that substantive criticism exists - so by all means let those equipped to synthesize that criticism present it here.Talented Mr Miller (talk) 16:01, 28 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

I agree with the person who said the criticism section should be altered. It is an important section to have, but Wheen adn Scialabba are fairly little-known writers, whereas Mac has been commented on by just about everyone. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.159.47.230 (talk) 16:39, 20 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

Why is the criticism section labelled as "reception"? The reception section excludes all of the reviews that expressed the greatness of the book. Judging from the reception section here, it looks like the book was a total letdown. It wasn't. It's one of the most critically acclaimed philosophy books published since 1980.

The title of the section should remain "reception". If it bothers you that it includes only critical reviews of the book, then add some positive reviews - don't needlessly change the name of the section. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 19:37, 9 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

Just my two cents worth - I agree that having Scalabba and Wheen as two of four critics in the reception section is vaguely ridiculous. They are reasonable people with respectable media profiles (and I have enjoyed stuff they have written), but they are not the first people I would turn to for representative examples of critical responses by Alisdair Macintyre's peers, to a book as significant as After Virtue. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.225.33.90 (talk) 21:30, 14 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

Solecism

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Please correct "abstracting ourselves from whom we are." Obviously should be "from who we are." Refer to any style manual on the difference between the subjective & objective case (even when following a preposition). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.206.236.100 (talk) 16:42, 19 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Not for nothing, Anonymous User, but it would have been less work to *correct the error yourself* than to write a snotty command for *someone else* to do it.Talented Mr Miller (talk) 14:13, 22 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

Single Source Tag

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I think that the single source tag is uncalled for. True, about 2/3 of the references come from one source but that is the book the article is about. I expect a large percentage of the references of a Wiki regarding a book to be from that book, it would be strange otherwise.

General critical response to Wheen

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Flagged this section as [by whom?], because the Washington Post article cited in support is the only critic offered up who actually takes this view. One critic isn't a general consensus.

Francis Wheen material

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Endymion.12, from all the evidence of the article about him (see Francis Wheen), Francis Wheen is a well-known writer. It is perfectly reasonable to briefly note his view of After Virtue. That is enough justification for including the material. Your claim that it is undue is baseless, given its brevity, and your attempt to remove it without consensus is unacceptable. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 21:57, 16 July 2019 (UTC)Reply

@FreeKnowledgeCreator: By my count there are four IP users who have already challenged the inclusion of this content on this talk page, and on that basis it is no more my responsibility to obtain a consensus for its removal than it is yours to obtain a consensus for retaining it. The "reception" section currently contains responses to After Virtue published in three very famous peer-reviewed academic journals. Discussion of a polemic written by a Private Eye journalist does not belong in the "reception" section of an article on the best known work of one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century. Unless the article is significantly expanded this would obviously be WP:UNDUE. The fact that it is "properly cited" is irrelevant. Citation is necessary to WP:VERIFY content, but it does not justify inclusion (see WP:VNOTSUFF), which is governed by policies like WP:DUE etc. Endymion.12 (talk) 22:23, 16 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
Comments that IP users made many years ago have no relevance of any kind to establishing current consensus concerning the disputed material. Your comment that it is "no more my responsibility to obtain a consensus for its removal than it is yours to obtain a consensus for retaining it" is fatuous and has no basis in Wikipedia's policies. Since it is a disputed change, of course it is your responsibility to obtain consensus. Trying to remove properly cited material without consensus is inappropriate.
I believe it might well be a good idea to establish separate sections for media reviews and comments concerning MacIntyre's book and reviews in academic journals. However, your comment that "Discussion of a polemic written by a Private Eye journalist does not belong in the "reception" section of an article on the best known work of one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century" is simply something you made up. It is not backed by policy. Whether After Virtue is MacIntyre's best known work or not has no relevance to anything; or are you suggesting that if it wasn't his best known book, the Wheen material would be appropriate? Likewise, it is utterly irrelevant whether MacIntyre is "one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century" or not: how would the Wheen material become appropriate if MacIntyre were less well-known? Clearly, you're just making this up as you go along, have not thought things through, and do not have a coherent, valid reason for removing the content. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 22:30, 16 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
@FreeKnowledgeCreator: The policy I just referred you to (WP:VNOTSUFF) literally says the following: "The onus to achieve consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content". It is your responsibility to obtain a consensus to include this information.
The comment you quoted above is fully supported by policy. This is (supposed to be) an encyclopedia, and not a repository for dumping any information you can find references for, as I explained above and in my edit summaries. Endymion.12 (talk) 22:35, 16 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
To respond to the allegation that I am "making this up as [I] go along, have not thought things through, and do not have a coherent, valid reason for removing the content, I will restate everything I have said as clearly and concisely as possible. The "reception" section is short (and very incomplete), and we currently have three references to articles in peer-reviewed academic journals. Inserting a reference to an obscure polemic written by a journalist (the citation for which singles out Wheen's criticism of After Virtue as the main failing of his book) alongside discussion of these peer-reviewed articles is WP:UNDUE, and clearly gives it emphasis out of all WP:PROPORTION to its significance. It's also just unencyclopedic. The importance of this book and of McIntyre makes the discussion of Wheen's (fleeting) reference to After Virtue in his book Mumbo-jumbo look fairly incongruous, as other users have noted before me. You have given me the impression that you don't know very much about McIntyre (or Wheen), which is why you may be struggling here. Endymion.12 (talk) 22:51, 16 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
WP:NOTEVERYTHING is irrelevant. It states "merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia". I do not suggest that the Wheen material should be included because it is verifiable. I suggest that it should be included because it is verifiable, about the topic of the article, and worth including because it helps readers understand the reception of MacIntyre's book. WP:NOTEVERYTHING is concerned with things such as, "Summary-only descriptions of works" and "Lyrics databases", which are not what we are discussing here. Stop citing irrelevant policies. Your comment that, "Discussion of a polemic written by a Private Eye journalist does not belong in the "reception" section of an article on the best known work of one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century", was stupid, or rather, emotional and irrational in nature. As I said, it is 100% irrelevant whether After Virtue is MacIntyre's best known work, or whether MacIntyre is one of the "most influential philosophers of the 20th century". You were simply making things up there, and I do not apologize for pointing that out. I am not surprised that you do not attempt to explain how your claim that it matters that After Virtue is MacInytre's best known work or that MacIntyre is one of the "most influential philosophers of the 20th century" is supported by policy. It simply isn't. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 00:38, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
The rest of your comment is just you making the same unsubstantiated or irrelevant assertions. For instance, you call Wheen's book an "obscure polemic". How do you know it is obscure, why do you expect anyone to care that you think it is "obscure", and what does its supposedly being obscure have to do with Wikipedia's policies? Nothing, of course. You assert that the Wheen material is undue; the relevant portion of the policy states, "Neutrality requires that each article or other page in the mainspace fairly represents all significant viewpoints that have been published by reliable sources, in proportion to the prominence of each viewpoint in the published, reliable sources." I see nothing that suggests that Wheen's viewpoint isn't significant or that his book is not a reliable source. A brief mention of his view is definitely not undue; whether the material appears beside discussion of "peer-reviewed articles" is simply a question relating to the organization of material in the article, and has nothing to do with whether the content is undue or not. I already noted that the issue could be solved simply by establishing a different section for media commentary. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 00:40, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
I have nothing further to add here (I did explain why the significance of this book and its author is relevant in the second comment). You're either somehow incapable of interpreting straightforward arguments, or more likely you're too preoccupied with restoring this information to care whether you understand. We simply disagree on the points concerning policy. I will expand/rewrite the section in the next few weeks. Endymion.12 (talk) 01:39, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
That is tantamount to saying that you cannot defend your position. That of course is unsurprising. You have consistently avoided responding to my points. Making self-referential comments about your own past comments and what you claim to have explained in them is preposterous behavior. If you seriously believe that your claim that, because After Virtue is MacIntyre's best-known book and MacIntyre is one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century, the material about Wheen should not be included, is based in policy, then that shows simply that you have no understanding of the relevant policies. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 01:47, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
So I have two options here: I can either (1) engage in a long, circuitous argument with someone whose replies make very clear to me that we're talking entirely at cross-purposes. The tone/register of your comments also suggest there is little prospect of achieving any kind of understanding.
Or,
(2) I can use that time instead to devote a few hours in the next few weeks, perhaps this Sunday, to expanding and rewriting the section. I work in academia and have access to most indexed/online journals, and can therefore use literature reviews/secondary literature to provide a balanced summary of all the major critical responses to After Virtue over the last few decades. The "reception" section for any major book should ideally contain such a balanced summary of all the major responses, rather than a collection of comments on random books with no attempt made to establish how significant they are in the reception of the work.
I'm satisfied that I've expressed myself very clearly in my previous comments. By "obscure" I meant "not known to many people" rather than difficult to follow or understand, if that clears up any confusion. Endymion.12 (talk) 10:16, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
The talk page is a place for discussing improvements to the article, not a place for you to discuss your life. Nor should you assume that other editors necessarily care where you work. Note that irrelevant comments are subject to potential removal. Also, I understood what you meant by "obscure", thank you. Don't patronize me. Instead of explaining something that does not need explaining, you could consider that your unsupported claims about the obscurity of Wheen's work do not provide you with an excuse for removing mention of it. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 10:42, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
  Response to third opinion request:
In my opinion, this doesn't belong in the article. I know nothing about Wheen, but from their Wikipedia page they don't seem to be a respected philosopher, so their opinion doesn't seem reliable or relevant. The book in question doesn't seem to be particularly notable in the field of philosophy, and is published by "4th estate", which is a generalist subsidiary of Harper-Collins. It's not a scientific or academic publishing house even though HC has several of those it could have been published through, including its primary label. There is no evidence the book has gone through any sort of peer review or fact checking process. We have no idea how much space Wheen has devoted to this publication in his critique, whether it is a chapter or a couple of passing paragraphs. In short, I'm not seeing that this is actually a RS for the subject under discussion under WP:RSCONTEXT. At this stage it's really only RS for the fact that this is Wheen's opinion, and since Wheen himself isn't an authority on this subject, it really only belongs in his article. Of course if there is evidence that Wheen is a respected authority in this field, that his book is respected amongst experts in philosophy or that the book has been fact checked and peer reviewed and the analysis of this work constitutes multiple pages therein, then that changes things completely. But at this stage, my opinion is that it doesn't belong. What a journalist writes about a respected philosophical work isn't particularly noteworthy, and at seems to border on WP:COATRACK.
On a couple of unrelated points, whether an editor is an "IP user" or otherwise has no bearing on the validity or weight of their position. And as per WP:STATUSQUO it is indeed the responsibility of an editor wanting to add material to an article to obtain a consensus for retaining it according to Wikipedia policies. This article stood for 5+ years without this material, even though Wheen's book was published by 2004. Wikipedia policy is quite clear in this: During a dispute discussion, until a consensus is established, you should not revert away from the status quo. Mark Marathon (talk) 10:44, 17 July 2019 (UTC) Mark Marathon (talk) 10:44, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for your third opinion, Mark Marathon. Could you please clarify how it is based in policy: what policy supports the extraordinarily restrictive view that only opinions of "respected philosophers" should be mentioned in articles about books by philosophers? So far as I know, no policy states anything of the sort, so while I respect your right to disagree with me, I do not see the opinion you have offered as having any basis in policy. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 10:54, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
@FreeKnowledgeCreator: Are you deliberately missing the point here, or are you just not reading what other people have written? I don't understand how you can respond to a thoughtful comment concerning the RS policy and the relative significance/noteworthiness of Wheen's opinions by asking why "only opinions of "respected philosophers" should be mentioned in articles about books by philosophers", or to a comment I left explaining that I intend rewrite the section using literature reviews with the reply that you're not interested in "where [I] work". As I have explained before, the inclusion of content need not be explicitly ruled out by policy for it to be inappropriate for an encyclopedia entry. Endymion.12 (talk) 11:35, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
First off, a 3rd opinion isn't actually required to be based on policy per se. It's an informal process that evaluates both the arguments provided by the other editors. In this case policy is an issue, specifically WP:DUE and its relationship to WP:CONTEXTMATTERS. Based on a Google search and this very article, "After Virtue" is a respected scholarly work by a respected scholar, published by the press of a respected university, included in the syllabus of respected universities and colleges and analyse din respected scholarly journals. That makes this an inherently scholarly issue. An article should fairly represents viewpoints in proportion to the prominence of each viewpoint in the published, reliable sources. To determine if a source is reliable for a scholarly issue, the more people engaged in checking facts and scrutinizing the writing, the more reliable the publication. Per WP:SCHOLARSHIP, a book that has been vetted by the scholarly community is regarded as reliable for scholarly issues, where the material has been published in reputable peer-reviewed sources or by well-regarded academic presses. Information provided in passing by an otherwise reliable source that is not related to the principal topics of the publication may not be reliable.
At this stage I do not see any evidence that Wheen's viewpoint constitutes ~40% of the prominence of that viewpoint in the published sources, as such it doesn't warrant 40% of the space in the reception section and so fails WP:DUE. At this stage I see no evidence that 4th Estate is a well-regarded academic press. I see no evidence that Wheen's work has been subject to any fact checking at all (as opposed to editorial checking for style) or that it has been otherwise vetted by the scholarly community. I see no evidence that his comments on "After Virtue" are anything other than provided in passing, even were his work to meet all the other criteria for RS. In short, I don't see that the viewpoint meets WP:DUE, I don't see that Wheen's book complies with WP:RS, specifically WP:SCHOLARSHIP. The policy is not that only opinions of "respected philosophers" should be mentioned in articles about books by philosophers. The policy is that only books vetted by the scholarly community are considered RS for articles on scholarly matters, and that we can only present viewpoints in proportion to their representation in reliable sources. As an example, the number of books published by creationist publishing houses critical of "Origin of Species" at least equals if not outnumber works that are supportive of it. We don't actually give them any weight in the "Origin of Species" article because they aren't RS for a scholarly article, such as "Origin of Species". What a minister thinks of the work doesn't signify unless it is vetted by the scholarly community and published in reputable peer-reviewed sources or by well-regarded academic presses. If you can find a review by an economist, or even a journalist, published in a scholarly source, then by all means it should be included. If you can find a scholarly article by a blacksmith or a peacock breeder that references Wheen's work on this issue, that should definitely be included. But the opinion of a journalist with no training or standing in the field of philosophy published in the popular press just doesn't have any weight in a discussion of a scholarly work and to include it violates WP:RS and WP:DUE. That's my opinion, which is what was requested. 3os are not binding and you are free to take this to another dispute resolution if you wish, but my opinions has been provided.Mark Marathon (talk) 11:38, 17 July 2019 (UTC)Reply

To reply:

Endymion.12, for some reason best known to yourself, you stated that you "work in academia". I explained that I do not care where you work to disabuse you of the idea that other editors care where you work, or about other such facts about your life. Please do remember that talk pages are for discussing the article, not for sharing random facts about yourself that may not interest other people.

Mark Marathon: I find your comment that you find no evidence that "I do not see any evidence that Wheen's viewpoint constitutes ~40% of the prominence of that viewpoint in the published sources, as such it doesn't warrant 40% of the space in the reception section and so fails WP:DUE" unfortunate. You are, I think, interpreting WP:DUE in a mechanical fashion that it was never meant to be interpreted. I see no reason to suppose that for each "viewpoint" editors are meant to determine precisely how prominent it is in reliable sources and give it a precise, corresponding amount of space in the article. As such, I cannot take your comment particularly seriously. Your implied comparison of Wheen's views to creationism would carry more weight than it does if there were any evidence that Wheen's views are considered equally as fringe as creationism; I see no such evidence. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 04:52, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply

I will not restore the material about Wheen at this time, but the main reason is that the content is poorly cited - apparently to a newspaper article discussing Wheen's book, rather than to the book itself. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 05:06, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply

The last comment is ridiculous, since reviews are the only sources we ought to be using here. Mumbo-jumbo is a WP:PRIMARY source for discussion concerning Mumbo-jumbo, and any discussion ought to be rendered from (secondary) reviews.
I referred to the fact that I work in academia in the context of explaining that I have extensive journal access which I will use when re-writing the "reception" section, primarily using literature reviews. To "determine precisely how prominent [a source] is in reliable sources and give it a precise, corresponding amount of space in the article was precisely the intention of the WP:DUE policy. You've sadly missed the point concerning the Creationism analogy. Endymion.12 (talk) 22:11, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
No policy dictates that "reviews are the only sources we ought to be using here", which is a ridiculous comment in itself. If you look, you will see that the "Summary" section is cited to After Virtue, which of course is a book, not a "review". That Wheen's book would be a primary source for discussing itself is irrelevant, since no one was proposing to use it as a source for discussing itself; I was proposing using it as a source to discuss After Virtue. For that purpose it is a secondary source. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 23:29, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
You should only be using reviews or secondary/tertiary literature to discuss primary texts. The "reception" section should discuss the reception of the book and not the book itself, hence my comment. Mumbo-jumbo is not a valid source (RS) for discussing After Virtue itself (outside the "reception" section). I'm going to stop responding here because this is becoming tedious. Endymion.12 (talk) 23:39, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
I do not need advice from you about how to use primary versus secondary sources. The comment you made above ("reviews are the only sources we ought to be using here") was quite confused and strange, so I thought it might be best to point out that it was simply mistaken. Rather than acknowledge that you were mistaken, you've made another confused and strange comment in response. You're right, this is tedious. FreeKnowledgeCreator (talk) 23:44, 18 July 2019 (UTC)Reply