Massive fight over "witchcraft"
-
- Sucker
- Posts: 1411
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2023 9:08 am
- Location: The Astral Plane
- Has thanked: 1475 times
- Been thanked: 300 times
Massive fight over "witchcraft"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Witchcraft
The lead of the article began by describing it as "magic used to harm others". A bunch of people got upset by this, and went to the TP with (presumably) large amounts of sockpuppets. Now their also fighting over a potential page move.
The lead of the article began by describing it as "magic used to harm others". A bunch of people got upset by this, and went to the TP with (presumably) large amounts of sockpuppets. Now their also fighting over a potential page move.
"Globally banned" since September 5, 2023 for exposing harassment.
-
- Sucks
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:56 pm
- Location: The Jungle of Views
- Has thanked: 18 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
This is the kind of Wiki drama I enjoy. No financial conflicts of interest or serious political projects, no meta-points about Wikipedia or years-old feuds between careerists, just a carnival of bad opinions. Of course any argument about the accuracy of characterisations of "witchcraft" involves the false premise that there is any meaningful thing to which those characterisations refer in the first place. The nonsensicality of the Christian thesis which forced together various divergent practices, real and imaginary, under this name in order to condemn them, is no less present in its "Wiccan" antithesis, dreamt up by nudists in the early 1920s.
Editing Wikipedia is not a substitute for being a person.
-
- Sucks
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:56 pm
- Location: The Jungle of Views
- Has thanked: 18 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
Taking a scroll through the article, it's atrocious how much random information it jumbles together under one title, sticking Japanese folklore in the same section as stuff about the killing of African children, and a diatribe about Russian superstitions. It's a good example of a problem symptomatic of articles that attempt to survey too broad or subjective a topic for the encyclopaedic style: the total muddling of categories, between things that have shared origins, things that are related by an ongoing process of exchange with each other, things that are merely similar to each other, things that are lumped together due to convention, and things that just happen to have been given the same name. Thanks to Wikipedia and its promoters, the litter of accidental and bizarre suggestions conceived through such poor work are eventually born into the popular consciousness and gain a life of their own as firmly held beliefs.
What if the first western anthropologists in the Philippines, at their convenience, had chosen different initial terms for these ideas? The article confuses the difference between cultures who hate witches and cultures who like witches with the difference between cultures whose good "magical" figures were dubbed "witches" by English people and cultures whose bad "magical" figures were dubbed "witches" by English people. The debate is fruitless because no-one knows exactly what they're talking about. They don't know what they're talking about because they aren't talking about one thing at all.In the Philippines, as in many of these cultures, witches are viewed as those opposed to the sacred. In contrast, anthropologists writing about the healers in Indigenous Philippine folk religions either use the traditional terminology of these cultures, or broad anthropological terms like shaman.
Editing Wikipedia is not a substitute for being a person.
-
- Sucks Admin
- Posts: 5136
- Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2017 1:56 am
- Location: The ass-tral plane
- Has thanked: 1371 times
- Been thanked: 2115 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
Look at the archives of the talkpage. People have been fighting over it since 2004. Brutal editwars always lead to shredded and LONG articles, as I keep pointing out.rubricatedseedpod wrote: ↑Sat Jul 22, 2023 9:10 pmTaking a scroll through the article, it's atrocious how much random information it jumbles together under one title, sticking Japanese folklore in the same section as stuff about the killing of African children, and a diatribe about Russian superstitions. It's a good example of a problem symptomatic of articles that attempt to survey too broad or subjective a topic for the encyclopaedic style: the total muddling of categories, between things that have shared origins, things that are related by an ongoing process of exchange with each other, things that are merely similar to each other, things that are lumped together due to convention, and things that just happen to have been given the same name.
And in recent months, one account has been fighting off one "offended" wiccan after another. He (?) appears to be an expert on jumping spiders. What is Nosferattus doing on this article? This is nothing too--editwarring was even more brutal in the 2006-2010 period.
-
- Sucks
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:56 pm
- Location: The Jungle of Views
- Has thanked: 18 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
Sent to DRN the other day. It's insane that Esowteric is continuing to push the idea that the lack of neopagan POV is a form of “systemic bias.” If anything, emphasis on neopagan ideas would be more symptomatic of the editorship's pathological demographics.
Editing Wikipedia is not a substitute for being a person.
-
- Sucker
- Posts: 1411
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2023 9:08 am
- Location: The Astral Plane
- Has thanked: 1475 times
- Been thanked: 300 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
Lol. Wonder if it'll eventually go to ArbCom.rubricatedseedpod wrote: ↑Thu Jul 27, 2023 8:16 amSent to DRN the other day. It's insane that Esowteric is continuing to push the idea that the lack of neopagan POV is a form of “systemic bias.” If anything, emphasis on neopagan ideas would be more symptomatic of the editorship's pathological demographics.
"Globally banned" since September 5, 2023 for exposing harassment.
-
- Sucks
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:56 pm
- Location: The Jungle of Views
- Has thanked: 18 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
I have hope that at least Vaticidalprophet isn't muddling them. Here he manages to make the key distinction between three confliciting grounds (more than just definitions) for the notion of "witchcraft," each of which may relate to the others through the definitions it produces:rubricatedseedpod wrote: ↑Sat Jul 22, 2023 9:10 pmthe total muddling of categories, between things that have shared origins, things that are related by an ongoing process of exchange with each other, things that are merely similar to each other, things that are lumped together due to convention, and things that just happen to have been given the same name.
Here we have clear-ish recognition of the distinctness of the following kinds of "understandings":Plutocidalprofit wrote:Following paragraphs could expand upon folkloric, anthropological, and religious understandings. These would be clearly linked and hatnoted to subtopics, including the Folkloric understandings of witchcraft-type article currently at the "Witchcraft" title, the Witch (archetype) article Skyerise is as-I-understand-it [as-you-overhyphenate-it] interested in writing (please tell me if I'm mischaracterizing this thought -- I do think an article on psychological/archetypal understandings of "the witch" is a great idea, though), and contemporary-witchcraft-related articles
- "Folkloric" and "religious" understandings – This might refer to the mythological figure of a witch in seperation from attempts to become one, or claims to a historical basis for the knowledge of it. Otherwise it might refer to an actual social role such as "cunning folk" or whatever the fuck.
- "Anthropological understandings" – It is right to use the plural in this case, since when anthropologists talk about witches, they are most often only borrowing the term to study a seperate culture, unless they are working in the term's original Western context. Though some anthropological theories may be trying to establish a causal link or make a serious functional comparison with other witchcrafts around the world, (example, example, example) it seems the term is most often picked out due to resemblance or convinience. According to WPO's resident anthropologist, Anyone who's read E.E. Evan-Pritchard's classic "Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among the Azande" can see that he knew darn well that the title of his book, (and the terminology he used inside: 'witches', 'oracles', 'seances' etc) was potentially misleading.
- "Psychological understandings" or the "archetype" of witchcraft (example, example) – Rather than grounding the value of the notion on historical or functional connections, these theories usually argue that the disposition to create "witches" as a social role exists somewhere in human nature. All "archetype" theories are susceptible to being completely insane and delusional, which has a long tradition going back to Jung, but they're probably still a notable topic.
- Everyone in the peanut gallery is too lazy to put in the work of seeking or reading the sources that could support a less clouded version of the article. Neither Vaticidalprophet or Skyerise have mentioned any sources in their statements. They're freestyling no less than we are here.
- Everyone who would be industrious enough to do that work will be scared off by the peanut gallery, thanks to the dangers of having so many eyes on one page, and the mystery of DRN's temporary siege on the article. Esowteric had to ask, P.S., Mr Moderator: I take it that if we spot changes to the article, they should be reverted (?). The obsucrely-located DRN Rule A #4 doesn't really tell you what should be done with edits by non-parties, and it's nothing but an essay anyway. Perhaps this vaugness is intentional: if the answer to Esowteric's question is yes, that would make DRN a potential tool for abuse; if the answer is no, that would make it impotent on highly active articles.
- The more rigorous the analysis, the longer it will be, and the more people will tl;dr it. Usually, long and considered comments are made even more dangerous by the constant abuse of the essay known as WP:BLUD, but a virtue of DRN is that its stratified structure treats that particular wiki-illness.
- At least one side of the dispute stands to benefit from the confusion, as it generates opportunities to accuse the opposing viewpoint of bigotry or crude understanding.
In any case this is an unusual and interesting situation for DRN, which is only meant to handle disputes with a small number of parties.
Editing Wikipedia is not a substitute for being a person.
-
- Sucks Admin
- Posts: 5136
- Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2017 1:56 am
- Location: The ass-tral plane
- Has thanked: 1371 times
- Been thanked: 2115 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
Please, never take Andythegrump's ravings seriously. Nor at face value.rubricatedseedpod wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:13 amAccording to WPO's resident anthropologist, Anyone who's read E.E. Evan-Pritchard's classic "Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among the Azande" can see that he knew darn well that the title of his book, (and the terminology he used inside: 'witches', 'oracles', 'seances' etc) was potentially misleading.
He's not out to "improve" WP . He's out to fuck things up.
COUNT ON IT.Lol. Wonder if it'll eventually go to ArbCom.
-
- Sucker
- Posts: 1411
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2023 9:08 am
- Location: The Astral Plane
- Has thanked: 1475 times
- Been thanked: 300 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
I CALLED ITericbarbour wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 3:27 amCOUNT ON IT.Lol. Wonder if it'll eventually go to ArbCom.
HAHAHA
This implies that there are Arbs that think that ArbCom should not accept cases at all. What point would it even pretend to have then?Worm wrote: I have no problem with Arbcom accepting cases [...]
"Globally banned" since September 5, 2023 for exposing harassment.
-
- Sucks
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:56 pm
- Location: The Jungle of Views
- Has thanked: 18 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
Re: Massive fight over "witchcraft"
holy shit
Editing Wikipedia is not a substitute for being a person.