Talk:Answers in Genesis/Archive 9
This is an archive of past discussions about Answers in Genesis. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 5 | ← | Archive 7 | Archive 8 | Archive 9 |
A word to the wise
Let's put this aside for now |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
James, a word to the wise. As you well know, your behaviour on this page is currently under discussion at AN/I. At the moment as I read it the likely outcome of that discussion is that you will be topic banned from creationism articles, probably broadly construed, if it follows the usual form of these things. In the meantime you continue to battle away here. Stop it now. Stop making any edits to the article and withdraw from discussion on this talk page. If you ignore this warning and continue, you stand a really good chance of being indeffed, rather than merely topic banned. I think the chances of you escaping unsanctioned are now close to zero. Take my advice and salvage what you can of your repitation while you still can. - Nick Thorne talk 12:35, 15 April 2019 (UTC)
Calton, would you please explain this revert of yours? What is the problem with the hyphen that you removed? Why did you leave an edit summary that reflects on Oldstone James rather than commenting on the change you are making. Oldstone James, why did you use the edit summary that you did when adding the hyphen? It seems to me to not relate to your edit. Also, please don't revert Calton again, no matter what. EdChem (talk) 15:58, 15 April 2019 (UTC)
A proposal: Oldstone James is pretty much certain to be topic banned, blocked, or mentored and thus is unlikely to use an edit summary on a minor typo fix as a soapbox again. Carlton admits made a mistake and didn't realize that he was reverting a minor typo fix (an error made more likely by the typo fix mot being properly labeled in the edit summary) and is unlikely to make the same mistake again. Carlton is unlikely to use a WP:NPA edit summary like "It's not that I don't trust you ... wait, I don't trust you" again. I hope that Roxy will dial it down a bit and not write things like "your potential protégé" again (further discussion won't change the odds of that happening) and is extremely unlikely to misidentify a null edit or dummy edit again. Because of all of these things, I propose that we stop talking about this, let everyone involved save face, let this comment be the last one, and collapse or archive this thread 48 hours after the last comment is posted. If you agree, please do nothing and go back to figuring out how this page should best reflect what is in the sources. --Guy Macon (talk) 13:22, 17 April 2019 (UTC) |
- For info: Oldstone James is now raising "creation science" at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style. Feline Hymnic (talk) 20:54, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
Controversial Edit Suggestion
I know many of you higher-up editors on this page don't like AiG & creationism, so I'd like to run this by you guys first to avoid another nasty edit war and inadvertently undoing all the good work that has been done so far.
Do you think this edit makes sense?
From this: Out of belief in biblical inerrancy, it rejects the results of those scientific investigations that contradict their view of the Genesis creation narrative and instead supports pseudoscientific creation science.
To this: Out of belief in biblical inerrancy, it rejects the results of those scientific investigations that contradict their creationist view of the Genesis creation narrative.
Or this: Out of belief in biblical inerrancy, it rejects the results of those scientific investigations that contradict their pseudoscientific creationist view of the Genesis creation narrative.
Just feels like it reads better to me, but what do you guys think? Also if you anti-AiGers prefer the second edit suggestion (as you undoubtedly will lol) you will get your "pseudoscientific" claim a little further up in the article. AKA Casey Rollins Talk With Casey 13:51, 10 July 2019 (UTC)
- It's not about what I particularly like (or don't!), but I would favor the alternative change. As far as most mainstream sources go, AiG's approach is pseudoscientific, and I think it's important to have that up front. Cheers. Dumuzid (talk) 15:03, 10 July 2019 (UTC)
- It's not about it being pushed up, but rather it reading better overall. Saying "Joe ignores what doesn't align with his worldview, which is nihilism" reads worse than "Joe ignores anything against nihilism". That's the logic I'm trying to follow.
Personally, I don't think this page should even be using a derogatory term like "pseudoscience" to refer to AiG (and FTR there isn't overwhelming consensus about that here either) but a combination of the scientific community at large's rejection of creationism and the majority of high-level editors on the page who agree that it's pseudoscience are why I mentioned that those on the other side might like that claim being bumped up a little bit. Not that I agree with it, nor is the point for it to be more prominent. But I'm not going to start an editing war rn because the majority disagrees with me. AKA Casey Rollins Talk With Casey 15:58, 10 July 2019 (UTC)
- It's not about it being pushed up, but rather it reading better overall. Saying "Joe ignores what doesn't align with his worldview, which is nihilism" reads worse than "Joe ignores anything against nihilism". That's the logic I'm trying to follow.
- The reason why I find the original sentence better is all the information it is able to condense (including via its wikilinks). I agree with Dumuzid that it's not a question of pro/anti editors: one doesn't need to be against to understand that it's pseudoscientific or that there are better explanations and mainstream geology and biology is not anti-creationism activism. Moreover, the article text is not supported by our beliefs but by citations to reliable sources. The lead is a bit exceptional in that it must summarize the article's body.
- The last suggestion also includes the pseudoscience mention to satisfy WP:PSCI but it is a bit different: it starts with the premise that the pseudoscientific arguments are already established, causing the rejection of scientific evidence. In the first/original sentence, new pseudoscientific arguments or apologetics can be developped to reject new scientific evidence that may contradict the doctrine (and indeed, creationist movements are part of a living tradition). —PaleoNeonate – 21:06, 10 July 2019 (UTC)
- Definitely sounds like a better read to me; reads more smoothly and avoids repetition.O̲L̲D̲S̲T̲O̲N̲E̲J̅A̅M̅E̅S̅? 14:59, 24 August 2019 (UTC)