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  Please refrain from making unconstructive edits to Wikipedia. Your edits appear to be disruptive and have been or will be reverted.

Please ensure you are familiar with Wikipedia's policies and guidelines, and please do not continue to make edits that appear disruptive. Continual disruptive editing may result in loss of editing privileges. Thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.140.91.223 (talk) 21:10, 31 March 2018 (UTC)Reply


  Hello. This is a message to let you know that one or more of your recent contributions did not appear constructive and has been reverted. Please take some time to familiarise yourself with our policies and guidelines. You can find information about these at our welcome page which also provides further information about contributing constructively to this encyclopedia. If you only meant to make test edits, please use the sandbox for that. If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, you may leave a message on my talk page. Thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.140.91.223 (talk) 19:11, 31 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

Advice

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I see that there is some sort of feud going on with User:91.140.91.223. Do you know what that is about?

Anyway, I can see that you are trying to do good work by removing junk text like "His research has been groundbreaking and deeply influential" (That was just embarrassingly awful, so thanks for getting rid of that!), but I think you might be being a bit too gung-ho in some other respects. For example, you propose deletion of Michael Rassias saying that he is "only a post-doc" but a post-doc who co-edited a book with Nash is probably not "only" a post-doc. The article does not sound particularly promotional to me and not obviously in need of deletion. I think slapping a tag on it to question notability might be legit but proposing deletion is a bit much. I'll take the Proposed Deletion off and replacing it with a notability tag.

The trouble with putting Proposed Deletion on an article about an academic which maybe only a few people have on their watchlist is that it could get deleted almost without anybody noticing and we could lose legitimate minor articles that way. Proposed Deletion is only really appropriate for pretty uncontroversial cases of articles that definitely do not meet the inclusion criteria. For others, it is better to go to WP:AfD. That way, you get to write a more detailed explanation of what the problems are (which is particularly helpful when they are not obvious) and then it gets listed for discussion and at least a few knowledgeable people will have a look at it and see whether they agree before it gets deleted. This prevents articles on valid subjects from getting deleted and also establishes a precedent against them being recreated spuriously later.

I also saw you removing some references. If those really were invalid references to pure vanity publications then that is fine but references to legitimate publications, even if they are not the top ones in their field, should be kept if they are relevant to the content they are meant to be supporting. I'm not qualified to judge which those were, so maybe this is all OK. I just want to suggest a little caution. --DanielRigal (talk) 22:08, 31 March 2018 (UTC)Reply