|
|
|
Connelly blocks Damian, How far can this madness go? |
|
|
Peter Damian |
|
I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
Group: Regulars
Posts: 4,400
Joined:
Member No.: 4,212
|
William Connelly has blocked me http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...%3APeter_Damianfor trying to revert the efforts of an insane IP on the Ayn Rand article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contr.../72.199.110.160To compound the madness, EdJohson has now locked down the article http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...&action=historyin the insane state. QUOTE Since it's been pointed out that 72.199.110.160 (talk · contribs) continues to revert war on this article without ever participating in the discussion on the Talk page, I have semiprotected Objectivism (Ayn Rand) for one month. (The IP has edited that article 26 times today, but made no appearance on Talk). Other admins can modify this as they think best. Protection will be lifted if the IP agrees to discuss and to abide by consensus. EdJohnston (talk) 22:36, 8 May 2009 (UTC)
Right, so why have I been blocked but this crazy IP is not? Why has the article been locked down for a month so the insanity can be protected? Exactly how insane can it get? This post has been edited by Peter Damian:
|
|
|
|
Peter Damian |
|
I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
Group: Regulars
Posts: 4,400
Joined:
Member No.: 4,212
|
QUOTE It looks to me like you're either POV-pushing (deliberately misrepresenting Rand) or simply uninformed. I would personally recommend that you stop doing that. However, if you continue, I would at least like to ask you to stop calling people names who are simply asking you to stop engaging in original research. (To everyone else: Peter appears to be asking me for a personal response or recommendation, and I am offering my personal opinion. I have no interest in getting further involved than this, and I'm unlikely to respond to further inquiries about this.)--Jimbo Wales (talk) 20:31, 8 May 2009 (UTC) No, the work I have done on that article has been very carefully sourced. Perhaps you should read the talk page. QUOTE Peter has provided precise, page-numbered sources for the summary. I don't have the book, and the full text isn't available online. He can hard;y be expected to copy type the pages here for everyone's review. Karbinski, if you have a copy to hand, could you just take one of Peter's sentences and show that Rand says something different? I think the burden is on you to show that the cites don't support what the article says.KD Tries Again (talk) 21:15, 7 May 2009 (UTC)KD Tries Again
|
|
|
|
written by he who wrote it |
|
Commie Mutant Traitor
Group: Contributors
Posts: 95
Joined:
Member No.: 431
|
QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Fri 8th May 2009, 11:20pm) Exactly how insane can it get?
Is this a rhetorical question? Rand's quote philosophy end quote was the subject; how much sanity did you expect?
|
|
|
|
Sceptre |
|
Senior Member
Group: Regulars
Posts: 318
Joined:
Member No.: 209
|
QUOTE(written by he who wrote it @ Sat 9th May 2009, 1:42am) QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Fri 8th May 2009, 11:20pm) Exactly how insane can it get?
Is this a rhetorical question? Rand's quote philosophy end quote was the subject; how much sanity did you expect? This much is true. Anyway, Peter, I've thrown myself into the ring to try and get you unblocked, if solely because I think protection should be applied over blocks in 3RR cases, unless it's going across several articles/pages. I'm not making any opinion of the content because Rand bores me from even the thought of it; as someone wisely once said, "The question soon stops being 'Who is John Galt?' and becomes 'When will John Galt shut the hell up?'". This post has been edited by Sceptre:
|
|
|
|
EricBarbour |
|
blah
Group: Regulars
Posts: 5,919
Joined:
Member No.: 5,066
|
QUOTE(Somey @ Fri 8th May 2009, 5:48pm) Yikes, this is both horrible and utterly laughable at the same time! http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...oldid=288750804Only a rabid Objectivist would write like that...... QUOTE In ''[[The Virtue of Selfishness]]'' she gave an original validation of her moral code, claiming to have bridged the infamous gap between [[Is-ought problem|"Is" and "Ought"]]—or between facts and values. Beginning by asking "What are values?" and "Why does man need them?", she argues that the concept of "value" implies an answer to the questions, "Of value ''to whom'' and ''for what''?" Thus, the existence of values depends upon the existence of an alternative in the face of which a being must act. "Where no alternatives exist, no goals and no values are possible." Utter rot. Peter, did you really think you could expect better treatment from Jimbo's droids? For all we know, that IP editor was Jimbo himself.... QUOTE 'When will John Galt shut the hell up?' If you ever run into Jimbo, ask him. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/yecch.gif) This post has been edited by EricBarbour:
|
|
|
|
Peter Damian |
|
I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
Group: Regulars
Posts: 4,400
Joined:
Member No.: 4,212
|
QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Sat 9th May 2009, 3:11am) QUOTE In ''[[The Virtue of Selfishness]]'' she gave an original validation of her moral code, claiming to have bridged the infamous gap between [[Is-ought problem|"Is" and "Ought"]]—or between facts and values. Beginning by asking "What are values?" and "Why does man need them?", she argues that the concept of "value" implies an answer to the questions, "Of value ''to whom'' and ''for what''?" Thus, the existence of values depends upon the existence of an alternative in the face of which a being must act. "Where no alternatives exist, no goals and no values are possible." Absolutely. Trying to derive an 'ought' from an 'is' is a logical fallacy. http://www.iep.utm.edu/f/fallacy.htm#Is-OughtAny encyclopedia covering the claim to have 'bridged the gap' between the premisses and conclusion of a fallacious argument should treat the claim for exactly what it is. Rather like someone who had claimed to have squared the circle, or disproved Cantor's theorem, or any other flaky claim. I am taking Jimbo to RFC after the block is over. Following this and earlier conversations, it is clear he is behind all this nonsense.
|
|
|
|
Moulton |
|
Anthropologist from Mars
Group: Contributors
Posts: 10,222
Joined:
From: Greater Boston
Member No.: 3,670
|
Values and Disvalues are Desires and Dreads in fancy clothing. Desires and Dreads are clearly emotional choices spelling out the preferences of one character (the Protagonist) against another (the Antagonist). There is a lamentable tendency to cast Values and Disvalues into something more mandatory, such as Good and Evil or Right and Wrong (and then seek the Machiavellian political power to impose those choices on the population at large). Perhaps if Ayn Rand had access to modern neuroscience, she would appreciate that the Amygdala — the brain's emotion processor — is an idiosyncratic sorter of personal desires and dreads. In the west, we often put survival at the top of the list of desires ("I put before you life and death; therefore choose life"). But there are also Klingons among us (Live Free or Die) who would choose death before dishonor. On the Internet, where identity is fungible and self-resurrection trivial, the Phoenix Option is not such a profoundly religious innovation. When Protagonist and Antagonist line up with complementary Values and Disvalues (complementary Desires and Dreads), the outcome is a recognizable and familiar drama. One hardly needs a libretto or liner notes anymore.
|
|
|
|
tarantino |
|
the Dude abides
Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,441
Joined:
Member No.: 2,143
|
QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Fri 8th May 2009, 11:20pm) QUOTE Since it's been pointed out that 72.199.110.160 (talk · contribs) continues to revert war on this article without ever participating in the discussion on the Talk page, I have semiprotected Objectivism (Ayn Rand) for one month. (The IP has edited that article 26 times today, but made no appearance on Talk). Other admins can modify this as they think best. Protection will be lifted if the IP agrees to discuss and to abide by consensus. EdJohnston (talk) 22:36, 8 May 2009 (UTC)
Right, so why have I been blocked but this crazy IP is not? Why has the article been locked down for a month so the insanity can be protected? Exactly how insane can it get? The IP from San Diego appears to be this lawyer who's the author of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics. Here he is on March 1 editing his bio, the college where he received his degree and adding his name to the alumni section of the high school he attended. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...=72.199.110.160
|
|
|
|
GlassBeadGame |
|
Dharma Bum
Group: Contributors
Posts: 7,919
Joined:
From: My name it means nothing. My age it means less. The country I come from is called the Mid-West.
Member No.: 981
|
QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Sat 9th May 2009, 10:30am) QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Sat 9th May 2009, 5:27pm) QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Sat 9th May 2009, 10:23am) Blocked now for 48hrs more, simply for complaining about the block via an IP. I'm just beginning to wonder whether the Wikipedia cult is something far more insane and irrational than anything Ayn Rand came up with.
Any point to be made by your mistreatment on Wikipedia has been made long ago. You think I should not be posting this? [edit] You see the picture on the left. That's Sisyphus. Sisyphus rolls a gigantic heavy boulder to the top of an incredibly high mountain. It can take days or months or even years to get the boulder to the top. Then the gods topple the boulder back to the bottom. Sisyphus starts again. It's the human condition. Not so much that you shouldn't complain here when it happens. More that you should give them the opportunity there to keep doing it to you. I'm amazed you haven't disengaged more. You often seem to know what issues matter and even why this might be so.
|
|
|
|
LessHorrid vanU |
|
Devils Advocaat
Group: Regulars
Posts: 836
Joined:
Member No.: 3,466
|
QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Sat 9th May 2009, 5:23pm) Blocked now for 48hrs more, simply for complaining about the block via an IP. I'm just beginning to wonder whether the Wikipedia cult is something far more insane and irrational than anything Ayn Rand came up with.
That is, as you well know, block evasion. You flaunted your 3RR violations to WMC - who was indeed foolish enough to block you for 3RR without attempting to resolve the edit war - and then use ip's and create an account to continue arguing your case and acknowledge that you are a currently blocked editor... Why are you surprised at the reaction? As it happens, the admin who sprotected the article and I are considering what sanction the ip should receive in light of their pov pushing - the discussion is on my talkpage - it is a shame that you cannot contribute to it there. You are aware why that individual was so punished to be condemned never to manage to push boulder to the top? QUOTE(Somey @ Sat 9th May 2009, 9:45pm) QUOTE(tarantino @ Sat 9th May 2009, 9:34am) The IP from San Diego appears to be this lawyer who's the author of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics. I believe you're correct - most likely that's James S. Valliant himself... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/yak.gif) I suppose he wouldn't qualify under WP's definition of the term "conflict of interest," but at the risk of stating the obvious, there's just no way a person like that could possibly be the slightest bit "neutral" in an article about Randroidism. I would be surprised if any substantial edit to that article could be described as "neutral".
|
|
|
|
Cla68 |
|
Postmaster
Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,763
Joined:
Member No.: 5,761
|
I'm working off a fairly intense hang over this morning (it's Sunday morning here in Japan) and I can't think of a more helpful activity than going and working on the Ayn Rand article, not!
The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Peter, are you truly interested in improving the Rand article? If so, then it may be worth getting blocked over. Otherwise, for what it's worth, perhaps another activity or working on another article would be more productive.
This post has been edited by Cla68:
|
|
|
|
Malleus |
|
Fat Cat
Group: Contributors
Posts: 1,682
Joined:
From: United Kingdom
Member No.: 8,716
|
QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sun 10th May 2009, 2:55am) I'm working off a fairly intense hang over this morning (it's Sunday morning here in Japan) and I can't think of a more helpful activity than going and working on the Ayn Rand article, not!
The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paiella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Peter, are you truly interested in improving the Rand article? If so, then it may be worth getting blocked over. Otherwise, for what it's worth, perhaps another activity or working on another article would be more productive.
There are some articles you just have to let rot in the field, and Ayn Rand's is one of them.
|
|
|
|
Peter Damian |
|
I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
Group: Regulars
Posts: 4,400
Joined:
Member No.: 4,212
|
QUOTE ----- Original Message ----- From: "Family" <the.buckners@btinternet.com> To: "Jimmy Wales" <jwales@wikia-inc.com> Sent: Sunday, May 10, 2009 7:58 AM Subject: Re: Peter Damian block
>> I regret answering Peter's comment on my talk page. > > Why not ask David Gerard to oversight it? > > EDB QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sun 10th May 2009, 2:55am) Peter, are you truly interested in improving the Rand article? If so, then it may be worth getting blocked over. Otherwise, for what it's worth, perhaps another activity or working on another article would be more productive.
I am a credentialled philosopher. The article is not about Ayn Rand herself but her philosophy. It contains some startling philosophical errors (such as the claim that the principle of Identity originated with Aristotle). As a philosopher and a teacher, I feel bound to correct these errors. QUOTE Oh, have you changed your mind? William M. Connolley (talk) 22:29, 9 May 2009 (UTC) No, I posted a comment intended to lightly ridicule the attitude of some admins who are too keen on waving their own power about rather than building the best encyclopedic content that we can and you rose to the bait. That's precisely the sort of action that brings adminship into disrepute and makes WP look ridiculous to the outside world. Andy Dingley (talk) 22:33, 9 May 2009 (UTC) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Andy_Dingley" http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...er_your_request(Andy jokingly suggested that Connolley block him too, and Connolley did). This post has been edited by Peter Damian:
|
|
|
|
A Horse With No Name |
|
I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
Group: Regulars
Posts: 4,471
Joined:
Member No.: 9,985
|
QUOTE(Peter Damian @ Sun 10th May 2009, 3:03am) QUOTE ----- Original Message ----- From: "Family" <the.buckners@btinternet.com> To: "Jimmy Wales" <jwales@wikia-inc.com> Sent: Sunday, May 10, 2009 7:58 AM Subject: Re: Peter Damian block
>> I regret answering Peter's comment on my talk page. > > Why not ask David Gerard to oversight it? > > EDB QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sun 10th May 2009, 2:55am) Peter, are you truly interested in improving the Rand article? If so, then it may be worth getting blocked over. Otherwise, for what it's worth, perhaps another activity or working on another article would be more productive.
I am a credentialled philosopher. The article is not about Ayn Rand herself but her philosophy. It contains some startling philosophical errors (such as the claim that the principle of Identity originated with Aristotle). As a philosopher and a teacher, I feel bound to correct these errors. QUOTE Oh, have you changed your mind? William M. Connolley (talk) 22:29, 9 May 2009 (UTC) No, I posted a comment intended to lightly ridicule the attitude of some admins who are too keen on waving their own power about rather than building the best encyclopedic content that we can and you rose to the bait. That's precisely the sort of action that brings adminship into disrepute and makes WP look ridiculous to the outside world. Andy Dingley (talk) 22:33, 9 May 2009 (UTC) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Andy_Dingley" http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...er_your_request(Andy jokingly suggested that Connolley block him too, and Connolley did). And WMC unblocked him two hours later when Andy pointed out he was just kidding. Funny, the block summary stated "per user request" -- I thought self-requested blocks were a no-no.
|
|
|
|
Milton Roe |
|
Known alias of J. Random Troll
Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,209
Joined:
Member No.: 5,156
|
QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sat 9th May 2009, 6:55pm) The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Just out of curiosity, why the hell eat tapas and paella in Tokyo, unless you're a homesick Spanish ex-pat? It sounds like going out for sushi in Madrid. I'm sure it's possible, but what's the point?
|
|
|
|
CharlotteWebb |
|
Postmaster General
Group: Regulars
Posts: 2,740
Joined:
Member No.: 1,727
|
QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sun 10th May 2009, 1:55am) a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand?
Not sure but I think that means she likes you. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/dry.gif) QUOTE 22:33, 8 May 2009 EdJohnston (talk | contribs) m (61,300 bytes) (Protected Objectivism (Ayn Rand): Edit warring by an IP...) [edit=autoconfirmed] (expires 22:33, 8 June 2009 (UTC))
This seems unnecessary and inappropriate based on my interpretation of policy. He already blocked the IP, and that's usually enough. However he blocked it "anon. only", which means this person can still edit from their account if they have one. If they do have an account, there's a very good chance it is immune to s-protection as the level requirements are so low. If their IP is blocked and they don't have an account the logical step is to change their IP. If they keep editing the same article with a whole slew of them, then yeah it should be s-protected, but since that's been done already it's harder to measure this person's resources and resolve (though the latter seems potentially high—two dozen edits in one day?)
|
|
|
|
Viridae |
|
Fat Cat
Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,319
Joined:
Member No.: 1,498
|
QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Tue 12th May 2009, 5:18am) QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sat 9th May 2009, 6:55pm) The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Just out of curiosity, why the hell eat tapas and paella in Tokyo, unless you're a homesick Spanish ex-pat? It sounds like going out for sushi in Madrid. I'm sure it's possible, but what's the point? Does that apply to those two cities in general, or cities that are not generally recognised to be multicultural. I ask because I live in Melbourne which appears to have at least one restaurant specialising in every culture on this here earth. Its a multicultural foodie melting pot - paticuarly good if you want good (and generally cheap) Chinese or Vietnamese, but stretching to such countries as Tibet, Mongolia, Ethiopia and Colombia (to name a few random places off the top of my head - there is at least a half dozen Ethiopian restaurants for instance. Damn nice food.)
|
|
|
|
Milton Roe |
|
Known alias of J. Random Troll
Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,209
Joined:
Member No.: 5,156
|
QUOTE(Viridae @ Tue 12th May 2009, 12:11am) QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Tue 12th May 2009, 5:18am) QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sat 9th May 2009, 6:55pm) The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Just out of curiosity, why the hell eat tapas and paella in Tokyo, unless you're a homesick Spanish ex-pat? It sounds like going out for sushi in Madrid. I'm sure it's possible, but what's the point? Does that apply to those two cities in general, or cities that are not generally recognised to be multicultural. I ask because I live in Melbourne which appears to have at least one restaurant specialising in every culture on this here earth. Its a multicultural foodie melting pot - paticuarly good if you want good (and generally cheap) Chinese or Vietnamese, but stretching to such countries as Tibet, Mongolia, Ethiopia and Colombia (to name a few random places off the top of my head - there is at least a half dozen Ethiopian restaurants for instance. Damn nice food.) Oh, I'm sure anybody anywhere gets tired of the local food (whatever it is) and wants to try tacos in Tokyo or something. Fine. I just had the odd idea that some out-of-towners were being taken out for that kind of thing, but perhaps read more into it than there was. Just had Ethiopian food the other night-- in LA. Found out some friends of mine, of whom one is gluten-sensitive, were suffering from food deprivation. They didn't know that that teff used to make injera bread has little gluten. There's a little-Ethiopia near where they live, but they'd never been there. So forget my comments. I'm just a fan of trying to eat the local foods first when traveling, on the theory that the locals are more likely to know what they're doing. That's a pretty good first-pass rule for travel, when it comes to all activities. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/smile.gif)
|
|
|
|
Viridae |
|
Fat Cat
Group: Regulars
Posts: 1,319
Joined:
Member No.: 1,498
|
QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Thu 14th May 2009, 4:31am) QUOTE(Viridae @ Tue 12th May 2009, 12:11am) QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Tue 12th May 2009, 5:18am) QUOTE(Cla68 @ Sat 9th May 2009, 6:55pm) The other day while I was at a Tapas restaurant in Shibuya (Tokyo), a Japanese woman, one of my wife's friends, looked at me over her paella and asked me, totally out of the blue, What do you know about Ayn Rand? After picking my jaw off the floor, I answered sensibly, Nothing.
Just out of curiosity, why the hell eat tapas and paella in Tokyo, unless you're a homesick Spanish ex-pat? It sounds like going out for sushi in Madrid. I'm sure it's possible, but what's the point? Does that apply to those two cities in general, or cities that are not generally recognised to be multicultural. I ask because I live in Melbourne which appears to have at least one restaurant specialising in every culture on this here earth. Its a multicultural foodie melting pot - paticuarly good if you want good (and generally cheap) Chinese or Vietnamese, but stretching to such countries as Tibet, Mongolia, Ethiopia and Colombia (to name a few random places off the top of my head - there is at least a half dozen Ethiopian restaurants for instance. Damn nice food.) Oh, I'm sure anybody anywhere gets tired of the local food (whatever it is) and wants to try tacos in Tokyo or something. Fine. I just had the odd idea that some out-of-towners were being taken out for that kind of thing, but perhaps read more into it than there was. Just had Ethiopian food the other night-- in LA. Found out some friends of mine, of whom one is gluten-sensitive, were suffering from food deprivation. They didn't know that that teff used to make injera bread has little gluten. There's a little-Ethiopia near where they live, but they'd never been there. So forget my comments. I'm just a fan of trying to eat the local foods first when traveling, on the theory that the locals are more likely to know what they're doing. That's a pretty good first-pass rule for travel, when it comes to all activities. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/smile.gif) Yeah I'll agree with that. Read an amusing review of an Italian restaurant in Vietnam the other day.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:
| |