Wikipedia:Neutral point of view/BCE-CE Debate: Difference between revisions
Fixed some errors Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
|||
(306 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{ |
{{archive}} |
||
<!-- How long do Proposals for Consideration (PfC) last? 3-5 days like VfD/CfD? Declare timeframe here. --> |
|||
;The move to close section was moved to [[Wikipedia talk:Neutral point of view/BCE-CE Debate|the talk page.]] |
|||
{{rejected}} |
|||
I want Wikipedia to accept a general policy that BC ("Before Christ") and AD ("Anno Domini", "In the year of the Lord") represent a Christian Point of View and should be used only when they are appropriate, that is, in the context of expressing or providing an account of a Christian point of view. In other contexts, I argue that they violate our NPOV policy and we should use BCE (Before the Common Era) and CE (Common Era) instead. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 22:13, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
I want Wikipedia to accept a general policy that BC ("Before Christ") and AD ("Anno Domini", "In the year of the Lord") represent a Christian Point of View and should be used only when they are appropriate, that is, in the context of expressing or providing an account of a Christian point of view. In other contexts, I argue that they violate our NPOV policy and we should use BCE (Before the Common Era) and CE (Common Era) instead. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 22:13, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
||
*''This is my proposal. If you do not agree with it, please feel free to express your criticisms in the discussion sections, and to vote no. However, '''please do not edit the content of this proposal.''' If you have your own proposal to make, feel free to make your own proposal. Finally, if anyone I quote in the proposal feels I have misrepresented them, please let me know and explain how, so I can revise it.'' |
|||
''If people think they can rephrase what I have written to make it more eloquent, by all means do so.'' |
|||
*''If people think they can rephrase what I have written to make it more eloquent, by all means do so.'' |
|||
*'''But PLEASE put any comments in one of the appropriate discussion sections, following the proposal, below''' |
|||
------ |
|||
'''ANNOUNCEMENT: My primary purpose in presenting this proposal was not to take a poll, but to provoke discussion. Although there have been many comments (a few, especially among the “opposed” votes, quite thoughtful), I do not think there has really been much discussion, much dialogue. Many people state their views, without discussing them with people who have different views. One small example: although I and a few others have written comments and questions to people voting “no,” few if any of the people who oppose the proposal have asked questions of any of the sixty or so people who have voted “yes.” Moreover, it is a shame that most critics of the proposal direct their opposition to me, when so many other people support the proposal. Wikipedia is a community, a community needs to communicate, and the ideal form of communication is an open-minded discussion among people of opposing views.''' |
|||
'''I know that I am a polarizing figure for many people. <u>Therefore, I will step out of this discussion for several days</u> (Aside from maintenance chores). I hope that when I am gone, people on both sides of the issue will talk more to one another, asking questions and responding in ways that invite more discussion. Adios.'''[[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 15:12, 17 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
'''But PLEASE put any comments in one of the appropriate discussion sections, following the proposal, below''' |
|||
------ |
|||
Please place comments on the announcment/s at the bottom of the page, bellow the vote. Please make sure these adhere to [[Wikipedia:No Personal Attacks]] policy. For comments on the policy, see the Discussion sections bellow. Thanks. [[User:El C|El_C]] 20:28, 17 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
------- |
|||
== Origins of the Debate == |
== Origins of the Debate == |
||
Line 28: | Line 38: | ||
:By value or opinion, on the other hand, we mean "a piece of information about which there is some dispute." |
:By value or opinion, on the other hand, we mean "a piece of information about which there is some dispute." |
||
That BC/AD represents a Christian point of view, this is simply undeniable. BC stands for “before Christ,” with the presumption that Jesus is Christ. AD stands for Anno Domini, in the year of our Lord, with the presumption that Jesus is Lord. |
That BC/AD represents a Christian point of view, this is simply undeniable. BC stands for “before Christ,” with the presumption that Jesus is Christ. AD stands for Anno Domini, in the year of our Lord, with the presumption that Jesus is Lord. This is fact. |
||
== Defense of BC/AD, and Responses == |
== Defense of BC/AD, and Responses == |
||
Line 36: | Line 46: | ||
* its meaning has changed over the centuries |
* its meaning has changed over the centuries |
||
* people who claim it is offensive are disingenuous |
* people who claim it is offensive are disingenuous |
||
* It's also indicative of who won history's wars, whether or not nobly. History is not a tool to be changed at a whim. |
|||
=== Argument 1: Style === |
=== Argument 1: Style === |
||
Line 49: | Line 61: | ||
As to the second argument, that most people use and are familiar with BC/AD: This is an argument made by Jguk, who wrote "It is NPOV because we use it merely because it is the most common formulation" and later wrote “NPOV means that, for reporting purposes, we accept the societal norms that we are in. We use the most common terms as understood and used by our audience,” and by Silversmith who provided a long list of books that use BC/AD. |
As to the second argument, that most people use and are familiar with BC/AD: This is an argument made by Jguk, who wrote "It is NPOV because we use it merely because it is the most common formulation" and later wrote “NPOV means that, for reporting purposes, we accept the societal norms that we are in. We use the most common terms as understood and used by our audience,” and by Silversmith who provided a long list of books that use BC/AD. |
||
But more importantly, how wide-spread a practice is simply has nothing to do with NPOV. If this is Jguk’s and Silversmith’s interpretation of our NPOV policy, they are wrong. Quantity and popularity have nothing to do with neutrality. This is clearly stated in our [[Wikipedia: Neutral point of view]] policy: |
|||
First, we must make it clear that there was a poll on the [[Talk|Jesus]] page. 28 people favor BCE/CE, and 16 people favor BC/AD. That is 63.63% in favor of BCE/CE and 36.36% opposed — in any election this would be a landslide for BCE/CE. |
|||
But more importantly, how wide-spread a practice is simply has nothing to do with NPOV. Jguk’s and Silversmith’s interpretation of our NPOV policy is utterly, absolutely wrong. Quantity and popularity have nothing to do with neutrality. This is clearly stated in our [[Wikipedia: Neutral point of view]] policy: |
|||
:First, and most importantly, consider what it means to say that unbiased writing presents conflicting views without asserting them. Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views |
:First, and most importantly, consider what it means to say that unbiased writing presents conflicting views without asserting them. Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views |
||
That many books use a POV term does not make that POV term NPOV. |
- That many books use a POV term does not make that POV term NPOV. NPOV is not a popularity contest. It should surprise no one that a google search shows that the vast majority of people use AD/BC, since the vast majority of sites on the web are from Christian or Christianized societies. We know most Westerners use BC and AD, but they do not do so because it is “neutral.” They do so because the West is largely a Christian culture, by which I mean that many practices that have their origin in Christianity are taken for granted, regardless of what people believe (this is one meaning of "culture," a historically and locally specific set of habits). The only thing that Silversmith’s list of books, or the number of Goggle hists, is evidence of is that many people have this POV; but it is still a POV and not NPOV. Most people in the antebellum South (and probably the North too) thought Blacks were inferior. That most people thought this doesn't mean that it is an objective fact, indeed it is still a point of view, a highly biased one. So the number of books that use BC/AD, and the number of Google hits for BC/AD, are irrelevant. They do not count as evidence in a discussion of NPOV. This argument must be dismissed out of hand. |
||
=== Argument 3: Change in Meaning === |
=== Argument 3: Change in Meaning === |
||
As to the third argument, that its meaning has changed over time. This is a position taken by Alanyst, Jguk, and Trodel. I happen to have serious doubts about this; |
As to the third argument, that its meaning has changed over time. This is a position taken by Alanyst, Jguk, and Trodel. I happen to have serious doubts about this; Jguk and Trodel have said other things that lead me to question either their honesty or at least their consistency. However, I will first take them seriously before explaining why I think they are inconsistent. |
||
:Your marginal toning down to "inconsistent" (while still calling them dishonest and insincere), here and several other places, is too little, too late. You had already set the tone for discussion in your original proposal, by your original wording. Do the right thing and call off the vote and abandon your proposal now. [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 15:22, 17 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
This argument actually hinges on, or takes the form of, two arguments. One is really just a version of the “it’s neutral because it is popular.” This was argued by Alanyst, who wrote “It's so widely used that it no longer identifies the religious POV of the author who uses it. Hence its usage is NPOV, even if its historical meaning is not.” I have already explained why the “widely used” argument is irrelevant. But Alanyst is also suggesting that many people today do not know what BC and AD stand for. This is the argument of Trodel, who points out that in his office, “Most knew it was latin (or roman) had something to do with Jesus but had no clue as to what it meant.” Alanyst provides as an example “Thursday,” which is named after the Norse god Thor. As Alanyst correctly points out, no one thinks that “Thursday” has any religious meaning anymore; no one believes it is pushing a POV; no one is offended by it. |
This argument actually hinges on, or takes the form of, two arguments. One is really just a version of the “it’s neutral because it is popular.” This was argued by Alanyst, who wrote “It's so widely used that it no longer identifies the religious POV of the author who uses it. Hence its usage is NPOV, even if its historical meaning is not.” I have already explained why the “widely used” argument is irrelevant. But Alanyst is also suggesting that many people today do not know what BC and AD stand for. This is the argument of Trodel, who points out that in his office, “Most knew it was latin (or roman) had something to do with Jesus but had no clue as to what it meant.” Alanyst provides as an example “Thursday,” which is named after the Norse god Thor. As Alanyst correctly points out, no one thinks that “Thursday” has any religious meaning anymore; no one believes it is pushing a POV; no one is offended by it. |
||
Line 125: | Line 137: | ||
I think this is the real question because some people, like Jguk, simultaneously insist that BC and AD are just letters, so why should anyone care — and yet, when someone proposes other letters, BCE and CE, which are also “just letters,” he flips out. Either BC/AD are arbitrary, or they actually stand for something. If you believe they are arbitrary, then it should not matter to you at all what letters we use, and BCE and CE should be equally acceptable. But some keep arguing! Why do they care, if they are just letters? Obviously, they care very much. Obviously, they care that some people do not want to use BC and AD. Obviously, making other people use AD and BC is important to them. Obviously, AD and BC are not just arbitrary letters, obviously they do represent something. |
I think this is the real question because some people, like Jguk, simultaneously insist that BC and AD are just letters, so why should anyone care — and yet, when someone proposes other letters, BCE and CE, which are also “just letters,” he flips out. Either BC/AD are arbitrary, or they actually stand for something. If you believe they are arbitrary, then it should not matter to you at all what letters we use, and BCE and CE should be equally acceptable. But some keep arguing! Why do they care, if they are just letters? Obviously, they care very much. Obviously, they care that some people do not want to use BC and AD. Obviously, making other people use AD and BC is important to them. Obviously, AD and BC are not just arbitrary letters, obviously they do represent something. |
||
Critics argue that they represent “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” (in the year of our Lord), and above I pointed out that even if many do not know what they stand for, other do, and recognize their POV. This should not surprise anyone — I am sure that almost every editor at Wikipedia has written something that violated NPOV policy, and they didn't know why, and needed someone to tell them. As I said, I think Jguk and Trodel are |
Critics argue that they represent “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” (in the year of our Lord), and above I pointed out that even if many do not know what they stand for, other do, and recognize their POV. This should not surprise anyone — I am sure that almost every editor at Wikipedia has written something that violated NPOV policy, and they didn't know why, and needed someone to tell them. As I said, I think Jguk and Trodel are inconsistent when they claim that they are not using these terms to express a Christian point of view. In a moment, I will explain why. But since many people may sincerely not believe they are expressing a Christian POV, I want to explain why I think BCE/CE nevertheless upsets them. |
||
Indeed, given how offended people such as Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel get, I must consider that something else is going on — that BC and AD represent something other than “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” that really, really do matter to Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel (by the way, I recognize I may be being unfair to Alanyst. I sometimes think this view I am about to present does not apply to him). What do these letters represent? Simply put: the supremacy of their point of view, and the comfort that comes from believing that the rest of the world thinks like them. Maybe it just has something to do with the fact that some people are scared by the fact that they may have an unconscious bias. But I suspect that some people simply |
Indeed, given how offended people such as Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel get, I must consider that something else is going on — that BC and AD represent something other than “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” that really, really do matter to Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel (by the way, I recognize I may be being unfair to Alanyst. I sometimes think this view I am about to present does not apply to him). What do these letters represent? Simply put: the supremacy of their point of view, and the comfort that comes from believing that the rest of the world thinks like them. Maybe it just has something to do with the fact that some people are scared by the fact that they may have an unconscious bias. But I suspect that some people simply feel threatened by difference. I suspect that when a group of people are used to dominating the world — and to be clear, it need not be political and economic domination, it can be cultural domination, it can be the assumption that whatever you take for granted, everyone else takes for granted as well – it deeply disturbs them to realize that they no longer dominate it. |
||
Well, too bad. You have to accept the fact that not everyone in the world thinks like you. Not everyone in this world thinks like your friends, neighbors, and co-workers. You are claiming that "If you disagree with me, you are faking it" is pure and simple arrogance. There are people who know, and who care. They are not faking it. Please re-read the NPOV policy. You are acting as if the fact that your beliefs are common, no other view is legitimate. This is the ''opposite'' of our [[Wikipedia: Neutral point of view]] policy. That policy states, |
Well, too bad. You have to accept the fact that not everyone in the world thinks like you. Not everyone in this world thinks like your friends, neighbors, and co-workers. You are claiming that "If you disagree with me, you are faking it" is pure and simple arrogance. There are people who know, and who care. They are not faking it. Please re-read the NPOV policy. You are acting as if the fact that your beliefs are common, no other view is legitimate. This is the ''opposite'' of our [[Wikipedia: Neutral point of view]] policy. That policy states, |
||
Line 139: | Line 151: | ||
This is not a matter of being “politically correct” in the vulgar sense of the term. It is on the contrary an aspiration to live up to the best aspects of European civilization rather than its worst — to actively reject the legacy of the genocide of Native Americans by Europeans, the unbelievable inhumanity of the Belgian Congo, of the British occupation of India, Kenya, and other parts of the world, but to embrace the ideals of the American Declaration of Independence; of the French Rights of Man; of England's slow but steady decision to treat people equally before the law. There is nothing ridiculous about the principle that no one group's views should be imposed on another. I willingly accept the Gregorian calendar as a convenience, but do not force your beliefs that Jesus is Christ and Lord on me. That is unacceptable. Similarly, Wikipedia should be a place where no one group's views are foisted on another. This is what NPOV is all about. |
This is not a matter of being “politically correct” in the vulgar sense of the term. It is on the contrary an aspiration to live up to the best aspects of European civilization rather than its worst — to actively reject the legacy of the genocide of Native Americans by Europeans, the unbelievable inhumanity of the Belgian Congo, of the British occupation of India, Kenya, and other parts of the world, but to embrace the ideals of the American Declaration of Independence; of the French Rights of Man; of England's slow but steady decision to treat people equally before the law. There is nothing ridiculous about the principle that no one group's views should be imposed on another. I willingly accept the Gregorian calendar as a convenience, but do not force your beliefs that Jesus is Christ and Lord on me. That is unacceptable. Similarly, Wikipedia should be a place where no one group's views are foisted on another. This is what NPOV is all about. |
||
Now, I have suggested that Jguk and Trodel are |
Now, I have suggested that Jguk and Trodel are disingenuous, or at least inconsistent, when they claim that they use BC and AD without any Christian meaning. Out of one side of their mouths they insist that BC/AD are NPOV. Out of the other side of their mouths, Jguk says "It is a deliberate attempt to whitewash Christianity out of the picture," which makes it clear that BC/AD ''do'' express the Christian POV and are thus POV; and Trodel says that using BCE/CE tells the world that "there is a concerted effort to deny the importance of Jesus in history" which again makes it clear that BC/AD ''do'' express the Christian POV and are thus POV. Okay, at least now Jguk and Trodel admit that BC and AD are Christian terms representing a Christian view. But why does using BCE and CE "whitewash Christianity out of the picture?" Why does using BCE and CE "deny the importance of history?" The words "Common Era" do not in any way imply that Christianity does not exist. Indeed, if we use BCE and CE on this article, which very much explains events central to Christianity, I do not see how using these three little letters undoes the work of the whole article. Let us be brutally frank. The only think that the terms BCE and CE suggest concerning Christianity is this: not everyone believes that Jesus is Christ and Lord." Jguk and others have written ad nauseum about how I am so easy to offend, and take offense at everything (and anyone who knows my work here knows this is not true). But now I see that they are projecting. Look, it does ''not'' offend me that ''some'' people believe that Jesus is Christ and Lord. But it offends Jguk and Trodel that some people ''do not'' believe that Jesus is Christ and Lord. How hypersensitive can one get? You two must face facts: most human beings do not accept Jesus as Christ and Lord. You are welcome to your beliefs, but most people do not share them. If you find this offensive, too bad, you just are going to have to get used to it. As I have said before, the end point of Jguk and Trodel's logic is this: anyone who does not share their faith, or their beliefs, is offensive. And this, folks, is the most offensive thing of all. Like the term "Common Era," Wikipedia's NPOV policy is all about recognizing that people do not all think alike. It is almost terrifying, that Jguk and Trodel wish this weren't so. |
||
Tomer has (or had, I am not sure whether he has changed his mind or not) similarly revealed the Christian bias among people who claim that BC and AD today havenothing to do with Christianity. He writes, “‘Common Era’ is just plain stupid. Common? To whom? It's just a circumlocution based in a desire to either obliterate any mention or note of jesus in the dating system used in christendom over the past millennium and a half, or to simply avoid having to say his name everytime you state a date.” But what does Tomer mean when he says "christendom?" Does he mean the world consisting only of all Christians? If so, he is wrong, because many non Christians agree ''by convention'' to call this year 2005. Or by "christendom" does he mean all people who use the Gregorian calendar? If this is what he means, he is really insulting me and violating NPOV. I am not a Christian and although I call this year 2005 it insults me, and it is inaccurate, to call me a member of Christendom. If he believes that "Christendom" — the rule of Christianity – should rule Wikipeida, he has no business here at all. How dare he exclude all non-Christians (or demand that non-Christians accept Christian practices)? What does "Common Era" mean? It means an an era '''common''' to many people of many faiths, including Christianity but yes believe it or not including non-Christians too, and refusing to privilege a Christian POV. Why would anyone think this is stupid? |
Tomer has (or had, I am not sure whether he has changed his mind or not) similarly revealed the Christian bias among people who claim that BC and AD today havenothing to do with Christianity. He writes, “‘Common Era’ is just plain stupid. Common? To whom? It's just a circumlocution based in a desire to either obliterate any mention or note of jesus in the dating system used in christendom over the past millennium and a half, or to simply avoid having to say his name everytime you state a date.” But what does Tomer mean when he says "christendom?" Does he mean the world consisting only of all Christians? If so, he is wrong, because many non Christians agree ''by convention'' to call this year 2005. Or by "christendom" does he mean all people who use the Gregorian calendar? If this is what he means, he is really insulting me and violating NPOV. I am not a Christian and although I call this year 2005 it insults me, and it is inaccurate, to call me a member of Christendom. If he believes that "Christendom" — the rule of Christianity – should rule Wikipeida, he has no business here at all. How dare he exclude all non-Christians (or demand that non-Christians accept Christian practices)? What does "Common Era" mean? It means an an era '''common''' to many people of many faiths, including Christianity but yes believe it or not including non-Christians too, and refusing to privilege a Christian POV. Why would anyone think this is stupid? |
||
Line 197: | Line 209: | ||
:There is another reason to commit ourselves to this policy. Namely, when it is clear to readers that we do not expect them to adopt any particular opinion, this leaves them free to make up their minds for themselves, thus encouraging intellectual independence. |
:There is another reason to commit ourselves to this policy. Namely, when it is clear to readers that we do not expect them to adopt any particular opinion, this leaves them free to make up their minds for themselves, thus encouraging intellectual independence. |
||
Silversmith is right, that NPOV leads us to include multiple points of view in articles. The problem here is ''not'' with the policy or the principle, but rather with ''how it is being applied.'' Specifically, the problem with this argument is that it applies only to an article on dating systems, '''not''' to an article that uses a dating system. |
|||
For example, an article on Jesus should include multiple points of view: Jesus was the messiah; Jesus was a false messiah; Jesus was a prophet; Jesus was the son of God, and so on. Including these multiple points of view is one important way of achieving an NPOV article. |
For example, an article on Jesus should include multiple points of view: Jesus was the messiah; Jesus was a false messiah; Jesus was a prophet; Jesus was the son of God, and so on. Including these multiple points of view is one important way of achieving an NPOV article. |
||
Line 235: | Line 247: | ||
I grant that some people do not see a difference between AD and CE. But it is amply clear that many people do see a difference: one is POV and the other NPOV; one, in an appropriate religious context, is inoffensive, but in a secular or NPOV context very offensive. I have tried to explain why AD is POV and CE is not. If you still do not understand my arguments, and if you really, really see no difference between the two, please opt for the one that does not offend. I think our NPOV policy is more important, but I will settle for plain courtesy. |
I grant that some people do not see a difference between AD and CE. But it is amply clear that many people do see a difference: one is POV and the other NPOV; one, in an appropriate religious context, is inoffensive, but in a secular or NPOV context very offensive. I have tried to explain why AD is POV and CE is not. If you still do not understand my arguments, and if you really, really see no difference between the two, please opt for the one that does not offend. I think our NPOV policy is more important, but I will settle for plain courtesy. |
||
== Discussion == |
|||
'''''Note: I suggest that people use the [[Wikipedia talk:Neutral point of view/BCE-CE Debate]] to present and discuss alternative proposals''''' |
|||
==Revelant External Links== |
|||
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/brunel/A3176345 Description of the calendar at H2G2] - presenting both sides of the argument, and apparently attempting to be NPOV. |
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/brunel/A3176345 Description of the calendar at H2G2] - presenting both sides of the argument, and apparently attempting to be NPOV. |
||
*[http://www.studentsfriend.com/feed/topic11.html Student's Friend] - arguring for BC/AD, with a response to criticims. |
*[http://www.studentsfriend.com/feed/topic11.html Student's Friend] - arguring for BC/AD, with a response to criticims. |
||
Line 247: | Line 257: | ||
'''1838 E. H. LINDO Jewish Calendar (title-p.), Tables for continuing the calendar to A.M. 6000-2240 *C.Æ. Ibid. 111 (heading) 3760 C.Æ. Commencement of the Christian Æra. 1886 K. MAGNUS (title) Outlines of Jewish History from B.C. 586 to C.E. 1885.''' |
'''1838 E. H. LINDO Jewish Calendar (title-p.), Tables for continuing the calendar to A.M. 6000-2240 *C.Æ. Ibid. 111 (heading) 3760 C.Æ. Commencement of the Christian Æra. 1886 K. MAGNUS (title) Outlines of Jewish History from B.C. 586 to C.E. 1885.''' |
||
==Discussion== |
|||
See [[/Discussion]]. |
|||
== Vote for 3rd alternative == |
|||
===Comments in favor of the proposal=== |
|||
* '''In response to''' James F: "As an atheist I find the thought of cloaking the imperialism of a Christian dating system behind "non-Christian" names abhorrently vile, and amazingly POV." - I think this misses the point completely, and perhaps SLR's distinction is misunderstood. There ''is no'' "non-imperialist" dating system ATP, unless we want to adopt something radical, which Im in favor of. By your argument BCE and BC are simply interchangeable, and the distinction is only a disguise. What else is there to use? Certainly anything Gregorian is going to express the bias you mention. -[[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 00:21, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
*I think that [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] has done ''Wikipedia'' a service by summarizing the problem so thoroughly. I think it important to use BCE/CE for non-Christian subjects or non-Christian parts of the world. It supports the [[NPOV]] policy to do so and it is respectful to other cultures. [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 00:49, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
*[[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] should be upgraded to sainthood for his tremendous work and excellent service provided to Wikipedia. Thank you, good sir, for the great summary of the debate. The mere size of the summary is enough to convince me to your side. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 01:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
*BCE/CE have been used in many scholarly contexts such as history textbooks and historical non-fiction. I recently read ''[[Guns, Germs, and Steel]]'', which used the BCE/CE system quite well, and had a little introduction about it, which I will check for any useful info to this debate. [[User:Andrevan|<b><font color="mediumblue">Andre</font></b>]] ([[User_talk:Andrevan|<font color=royalblue>talk</font>]]) 11:47, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
===Comments against the proposal=== |
|||
When I use a day of the week (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, etc.) in an article, am I exhibiting a pro-pagan POV, because the days of the week are named after pagan gods? When I refer to the month of July or August, am I exhibiting a pro-Roman POV, because these months are named after Roman leaders? No. The days of the week and the month names have been in such common usage for such a long time that their origin is not really relevant anymore. While most people know the origin of the words, seeing "Thursday" doesn't trigger thoughts about [[Thor]], nor does seeing "August" make people think about [[Augustus]]. Similarly, seeing "B.C." doesn't trigger thoughts about Christ. They are all such accepted parts of a date that no-one thinks of anything but dates when they see them. On the other hand, when I see "B.C.E." somewhere, I personally find it jarring and find myself thinking about political correctness. Someone who is sufficiently distracted might hold that using BC/AD is NPOV and BCE/CE is POV, which is the exact opposite of what the policy proposal states at the start. I'm not saying that I hold this point of view (I believe that both date formats are NPOV), but I think that this point-of-view is missing from this argument. |
|||
Since I believe that both date formats are NPOV, I believe this is a style issue, not an NPOV issue. The MoS is in general fairly liberal about what is accepted, and I think this is a Good Thing. We should welcome contributions from anyone. What would have happened if, when I was first starting out on Wikipedia, I had written an article using British English spelling, and someone had changed it to American English spelling, and then when I changed it back and insisted that the article should use British English, I was denounced as a "POV vandal" and threatened with a block? I think I would have quit Wikipedia almost 3,000 edits ago. Similarly, I would not want to alienate anyone who wants to make valuable contributions to Wikipedia, regardless of what date format they want to use. |
|||
In some cases, it may make more sense to use BCE/CE than BC/AD, just like in some articles it makes more sense to use British English spelling than American English spelling. Just like a certain POV may be exhibited in the choice of spelling used in certain articles such as [[War of 1812]], a certain POV may be exhibited in the date format used in certain articles ([[Jesus]] might be such an example). However, in most cases, the date format used is benign and we should be open to either. [[User:JYolkowski|JYolkowski]] // [[User talk:JYolkowski|talk]] 00:45, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Jyolkowski, thank you for very thoughtful comments. However, I did try to anticipate them here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_3:_Change_in_Meaning] and here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Why_are_People_Unconscious_of_Their_Bias.3F]. I'd appreciate hearing more about why these specific arguments did not pursuade you. On the other hand, you have already taken the time to write a lot and if you think you don't have anything to add of course I understand that. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Personally, I'm so accustomed to seeing "BC/AD" that I find seeing "BCE/CE" to be disruptive, and I believe that there are others who feel the way I do. I would like these people to be able to think about the article content when reading an article, not about why this date system was used. Could some people feel the same about seeing "BC/AD"? Definitely. But I don't think we shouldn't force one date format on everyone, people should be permitted to write in whatever date format they're comfortable using. Also, everyone knows what BC/AD are. Does everyone know what BCE/CE are? I had no idea what these terms were until I went to university (~10 years ago). While we would link the first usage of these terms anyway so people can follow the links, I want to ensure that our encyclopedia articles are sufficiently accessible. [[User:JYolkowski|JYolkowski]] // [[User talk:JYolkowski|talk]] 01:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
This proposal is '''fundamentally flawed''' in so many ways. The MOST important of which is what you said yourself: (and that is mentioned below): any Gregorian is going to express bias. Period. As I was reading this I was so incredibly amazed that you did not notice what you were saying. I love this statement, for example: ''Although the Gregorian calendar was created as a specifically Christian calendar, many non-Christians were forced to use it, and many more were encouraged to use it. The Gregorian calendar is now a convenient convention that Christians, Jews, Muslims, Chinese, Hindus, and others have "in common."'' The EXACT same thing can be said about the terms BC/AD: ''Although the terms BC/AD were created as specifically Christian terminology, many non-Christians were forced to use them, and many more were encouraged to use them. The terms BC/AD are now a convenient convention that Christians, Jews, Muslims, Chinese, Hindus, and others have "in common."'' Your entire argument in favour of the Gregorian Calendar is: ''everyone uses it, so it must be OK''. That's a terrible argument. besides you're not really trying to argue in favour of the Gregorian Calendar, you're trying to defend the origin of the terms BCE/CE. |
|||
:You profoundly misconstrue and misunderstand the argument; either you are not reading it closely, or suffer from the unconscious bias I discuss. Yes, people share the Gregorian calendar by whiuch this year is 2005. But they do so because it is a convention, not because they share the religion. It is precisely the religion that they do not share, which is expressed by tersm like "Before Christ" and "Anno Domini." You fail to understand that people can share some things, but not other things. BCE and CE acknowledges that people share some things, but not other things. Note, I am not making a value judgement. I am not saying that "everyone shares the Gregorian calendar, so that is okay." I am saying that people share the Gregorian calendar, which is a fact — like it or not. And I am saying that not everyone shares the belief that Jesus is Christ and Lord — this too is a fact, like it or not. It sounds like you not only do not like this fact, it freaks you out. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 01:19, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Don't be silly, I don't suffer from an unconscious bias against BCE/CE, I have a very conscious bias against BCE/CE (that isn't evident?). Likewise, you have a bias against the AD/BC system, this however, has absolutely nothing to do with the issue at hand. I don't misunderstand your argument, I understand it perfectly (I just love it when I debate people, and people think that since I don't agree with them I must misunderstand their argument). |
|||
:::You are not being honest. You do misunderstand me, and there are two proofs coming up. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:09, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::::Not being honest? I misunderstand me? --[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 02:28, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::Yikes! My goof, I corrected it above! [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::I don't ''fail to understand that people can share some things, but not other things.'' I know that perfectly. However, your application of that argument to this situation is flawed, you're saying that the Gregorian calendar has nothing to do with the terms you call it by. You're attacking the AD/BC system, but just leaving the calendar alone, |
|||
:::Here is the first proof. You think there is something wrong with attacking AD/BC but not attacking the Gregorian calendar; that to attack one you must attack the other, to accept one you must accedpt the other. This is ''exactly'' what I mean when I say "You fail to understand that people can share some things, but not other things." You fail to understand that people can share the Gregorian calendar, but not share AD/BC. You say you understand that people can share one thing and not another, but when given a concrete example, you deny it. But wait, the second proof is even better. |
|||
::::That is ''exactly'' what I'm saying (wait... I'm agreeing with you?), I DON'T understand how people can share one but not the other. That must be what I'm not getting, please explain better.--[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 02:28, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::Okay, I will try. The classic, albeit mythical example is from the movie, ''The Gods Must Be Crazy''(and, in my opinion, an awful movie) when at the very beginning we learn that there are many more uses to a coke bottle than most Westerners think (I hope you have seen the movie) — the point is, the !Kung share the coke bottle with us, but do not use it the way we do i.e. do not share its uses. A real example is what West Indians did with excess (garbage) oil-drums — they turned themn into steel-drums (musical instruments). You can't call it an oil drum any more, because it is used for an entirely new purpose &mdasn; even if it is not only made out of the same stuff as oil-drums, they are ''actually'' made out of oil-drums. The argument rests on the fact that most things people do and even say can be reinterpreted. Let's just say, non-Christians have taken the Gregorian calendar from the Christians and have reinterpreted it. Does this make sense? There are many people who reject AD and BC. I think they are saying that using AD and BC would falsely suggest that they have not reinterpreted it, rather, it means exactly the same thing to them as it means to Christians. On the contrary, they use BCE and CE to signal that they reinterpret it. Does this make sense? If it does, I would ask you to consider going back over the relevant section in the policy proposal and see if you can read it in a new light. Respectfully, [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::like that makes it any better even though it's still based entirely on the birth of Jesus. Likewise, you could say ''people share the BC/AD terminology, which is a fact — like it or not''. This is entirely as valid as saying people share the Gregorian calendar. Frankly, I don't understand what you are saying at all. |
|||
:::Here it is! You admit you do not understand me at all! This is ''precisely'' what '''I''' meant when I wrote "You profoundly misconstrue and misunderstand the argument" (note how "misunderstand" is in my sentence ''and'' in yours; that signals agreement). [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:09, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::::I used misunderstand in the philosophical sense... as in, I don't understand how you could possibly belive what you do... not "I don't comprehend the words you are saying".--[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 02:28, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::You yourself said that just because everyone uses it doesn't mean it's ok: ''That many books use a POV term does not make that POV term NPOV.'' The EXACT same thing can be said about the Gregorian calendar. Just because everyone uses it doesn't mean it's NPOV. BUT... you said "people share the Gregorian calendar, which is a fact — like it or not." I think this is a direct contradiction. --[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 02:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
Additionally, that is not to say there isn't possibly a better system to choose! I can think of one right now, one that is far superior to your BCE/CE system, and one that we must adopt for all the reasons you have said against BC/AD apply also to the Gregorian Calendar. This system is entirely NPOV, which as you say, is non negotiable. Likewise, some of the flaws in BCE/CE (such as the claim that it is just BC/AD in another name, and that BCE/CE is still fundamentally POV). This system is shared by the global community (even if they don't know it). This is a calendar based on Geologic Epochs. This year is Holocene 11570, or for shorthand, just H11570. Additionally, there may be some error in the dating of the beginning of the Holocene Epoch, but as long as we establish a standard, an error of a few years is OK, as long as everyone is the same. Why is this system clearly better? Besides being NPOV, it also eliminates the need for 2 eras while dealing with the vast majority of human history. Previously with the outdated and POV Gregorian calendar, a large number of years relating to human history were in the NEGATIVES, this is horribly wrong. You cannot have negative time, so having negative years is foolish and confusing. While we are at calendar reform, we need to do this, because our current system of 12 months × X weeks × 7 days + .256363051 leap days is POV (based on roman and norse gods... your arguments apply to those to, and you can't just write off those as 'dead religions' because you said... ''the intent does not matter,'' so even though nobody is ''trying'' to support a nonexistent religion, we really are). This is the system we need to use, because it is NPOV and logical: 13 months of 4 weeks of 7 days + 1.256363051 leap days. This is much better: every month (named after the numbers, so we have month 0, month 1, etc...) has the exact same # of days (likewise, named after the numbers, day 0, day 1, etc...) and there are the exact same # of weeks in each month. Weeks, month, days they all evenly fit into the year except for the 1.256363051 leap days. |
|||
Obviously, I'm not seriously proposing this (unless of course people are crazy enough to support it... I know I am). What I'm saying is that there are relics of POV all over the dating system. Only with complete reform can you eliminate POV, and that reform cannot be instigated here. Wikipedia is a descriptive encyclopedia, not a prescriptive one. BCE/CE is nothing more than a pathetic little patch on a horrible illogical and difficult to use system. Lastly, I'm not point any fingers, but people that insist on being Politically Correct really tick me off :D --[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 01:13, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Do you reject the entire NPOV policy as being "Politically Correct?"[[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] |
|||
::No of course not, I see a big difference between PCness and NPOV. I reject PCness because it is an attempt to control people's thoughts bias by changing what you ''call'' something, not ''how you think'' about something. The two concepts are entirely different. Words become derogatory NOT because of what they are, but because of the meaning behind them. Changing the words does NOT change the meaning behind them. Likewise, changing what you CALL the eras of the gregorian calendar does not change the fact you are still using it. PCness is a half-effort, a facade, nothing more. |
|||
::'''However''', the policy of NPOV is entirely different. It is about changing the actual meaning, if not the words. I support this entirely. --[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 02:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
I'm going to have to vote against this proposal simply because I think it is too sweeping in its imposition of the POV that BCE/CE is less POV than BC/AD. I concur with previous statements that B/CE is POV. On the other hand, saying that the only NPOV system would be to use years Before Now (I believe I called this system BTY when I mentioned it on [[Talk:Jesus]]) is also POV, since it clearly indicates that the present is the only valid timeframe from which to view history. We could propose to use BJ, for "Before Jesus" (thought I'd better clarify that I wasn't talking about Slrubenstein's "sodomy" reference above...), vs. ABJ (oh my...), but I don't think inventing a new system just for Wikipedia is a very good way to go either. I'm afraid I see the years we use, no matter what letters we attach to them, as an expression of a POV, albeit a widespread POV and a generally accepted dating system (again, because of how widely spread this POV is). As has been pointed out by others, this system is deeply flawed, and the illogic of it was the basis for my arguments against its use ''specifically'' in the [[Jesus]] article (cf. [[Talk:Jesus]]. (To repeat my assertion there: it sounds ridiculous to say "Jesus was born as early as 6 BC." How can he be born before he was born? '''''6 years''''', in fact, before he was born?!) That is the ''only'' reason I have argued in favor of using B/CE in the Jesus article, eventhough I agree with Slrubenstein's POV that this is, in fact, 5765. Heavy-handedly saying Wikipedia is going to use only B/CE is in conflict with several WP policies, including NPOV. I'm not going to go through and list them, but I'm sure someone else will be happy to do so if my assertion is challenged. I don't think ''using'' BC/AD is POV, eventhough the terms themselves, when coined, clearly endorsed a POV. There is a not-so-subtle and very important difference. Incidentally, in the write-up, Anno Domini is consistently mistranslated as "in the year of our Lord". The correct translation is "in the Lord's year". There is a big difference. Clearly, saying "'''our''' Lord" is a very different thing from saying "'''the''' Lord". Incidentally, I just looked up "Anno domini" in Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language, 2nd College Ed....where it defines "Anno Domini" as "in the (given) year since the beginning of the '''Christian Era'''" (emphasis mine). Interestingly enough, the next entry is "anno mundi", which is defined as "in the (given) year since '''the supposed''' creation of the world" (again, the emphasis is mine...). Maybe I'm reading something into the text, but to me, the use of "supposed" would constitute a gross violation of NPOV! Maybe we should let Webster know... :-p [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 02:35, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:If there was ever an example of PC gone mad, it is your examples from Webster's. My advice, ifyou want to know what these words mean, is look for a Latin-English dictionary. In any event, if you want to suggest an alternate (less sweeping?) proposal, feel free to use this article's talk page. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Since I learned Latin as a schoolboy, I can tell you what anno domini means without the assistance of a dictionary. As for a less-sweeping alternative, I don't really have one. I think the whole system sucks, and that tacking on a different set of letters is about as sensible as wearing a new dress (B/CE) with old shoes (except on Purim, of course). It doesn't fix the system's inherent flaws and other problems, it just tries to paint a less hideous face on it. [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 03:12, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:I'm sorry, I didn't mean to be patronizing with the Latin dictionary comment, my intention was only to mock Webster's. I assumed you know the real meaning and no disrespect was meant, [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 04:09, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
OK, so maybe I do have something of a proposal, sketchy, at best...but ultimately, I think, more acceptable in its scope to most ppl who care about this discussion at all...please see this proposal's talk page. [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 03:56, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
'''A personal note''': I have no argument with people voting as they wish. But I am disappointed that — with the exception of a few very thoughtful comments (as many or more opposed as in favor) – the discussion centers on the very first paragraph of the proposal, and no one has yet to argue for or against any of the specific arguments and reasons detailed in the proposal. I think this is an embarrasment to the level of wiki-dialogue. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 06:05, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
===General Discussion=== |
|||
'''''Note: the sections for voting immediately follow this section''''' |
|||
Thank you, SlR, for taking the time to outline this issue so comprehensively and clearly. [[User:El C|El_C]] 22:37, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:I generally have no preference for either BC or BCE (or AD or CE). As a Christian, I use BC/AD throughout my day. But I have no problem at all if a non-Christian or secular or "neutral" source (not sure that true neutrality is actually possible, but the ''idea'' of it is, anyway) uses BCE or CE. The problem for me '''is''', however, that BC and AD have become simply a part of our culture and have, in many ways, lost their connection with Christianity. Actually, most non-Christians would concur that the life of Jesus Christ was a ''major'' world event that altered the course of history. So, BC and AD don't necessarily mean anything different than "pre-FDR" in reference to the U.S. presidency, "pre-Beatles" in rock and roll history, or "antebellum" regarding America before the Civil War; they are simply terms relating to a major historic event (in this case, the life of Christ). Again, though, let me reiterate - I have no great preference one way or the other. Thanks for reading. [[User:KHM03|KHM03]] 22:56, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Thank you for sharing, and speaking sincerely. I tried to address the points you raised in this section [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_3:_Change_in_Meaning] and wonder if you find them convincing. However, I do understand your general openmindedness and you may not care enough to explore the arguments in detail, [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 23:02, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::A good argument, as with this entire page. Maybe the bottom line for me is that if BC/AD are truly offending someone, then I don't mind "replacing" those terms with BCE/CE. So much of the gospel is ''already'' filled with controversy (Jesus as divine, Resurrection, etc.) that I'd hate for anyone to get bogged down in BC/AD. We need to pick our battles, and I can't believe that Christians really think this is one worth fighting! Hope it all works out; thanks for your work! [[User:KHM03|KHM03]] 11:42, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
There are so many phrases used in modern English that used to be related to religion but no longer are. "Oh my god!" does not imply a cry out to a monotheistic deity. Language evolves and, while I am fully aware of the meaning of AD, I do not think of any Christianity-related meaning when I see/use it. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 23:18, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:I agree. Even such an innocent word as good bye derives from the Christian source 'God be with ye'. Certainly within certain contexts it may be appropriate to use a different notation, but as a general policy it is denying us a connection to our history. --[[User:NeilTarrant|Neo]] 23:44, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::I tried to address the points you raised in this section [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_3:_Change_in_Meaning] and wonder if you find them convincing. Please remember, that the whole point of our NPOV policy is to consider that people have views ''different'' from yours, that our policies cannot favor your (my, our) own views over others. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:12, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
As a pagan-friendly agnostic, BC/AD does not bother me in the least. In fact, it should be maintained because to use BCE and CE IS POV, as it assumes that common usage is somehow wrong. Why can't we just make this part of the Preferences, like date formatting? [[User:RickK|Rick]][[User talk:RickK|K]] 23:43, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:But Rick, don't ''all'' (or at least, '''many''') changes made to comply with NPOV imply that the common usage is "wrong" (in the sense that it is POV? I am not claiming that belief in Christ is wrong, only that the claim that belief in Christ is ''not'' a POV, is wrong). [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:14, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
Thanks, this is a fascinating debate. As a Christian (agendas are best unhidden), I'm comfortable with AD/BC, but I concede that they are very problematic in general discourse. (You say that 'Jesus is Lord' is not a ''fact'' but an ''opinion'' - I suppose one might pedantically say that even that is an ''opinion'' - but let's agree that 'Jesus is Lord' is a very contentious claim.) |
|||
My problem is that although I do not want to defend AD/BC - as they are professions of faith - I don't really care for the alternatives. Common to whom? You suggests that the calendar is common in its usage- yes, but we are speaking of dates of the Common ''Era'' - to whom, and in what sense is the ''era'' common? |
|||
My personal preference would be to speak of dates before and after the 'Christian calendar' - that avoids professions of faith - and keeps us to the facts - this is a Christian Calendar (as there are Chinese, Muslim and Jewish ones) – this calendar takes its reference from a Christian claim to the dating of Jesus of Nazareth. Of course many who use the calendar are not Christians - but then we speak of 'Arabic numerals' and ‘English language’, without worrying about how many of the users are Arabs or Anglo-Saxons. Of course this option is no use - unless Wikipedia adopts its own notation - and that's useless. Given that, I'd rather not force a choice between the two problematic alternatives - let each editor use their own (as with US and English spellings). Incidentally, I believe that is the policy of most academic publishers - I recently published with Continuum and they raised no objections to my choice of AD/BC.--[[User:Doc glasgow|Doc Glasgow]] 23:45, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:These are very thoughtful comment. I don't think I agree with you, but I really appreciate your reflections, [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:16, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
This thorough and lucid proposal has provoked me to some reflection. I tend to use CE/BCE when writing as an archaeologist/historian and AD/BC when writing as a journalist. I recognise that AD/BC has the echoes of Christian connotations but so does much of English language usage. What I had not appreciated before reading this proposal was that CE/BCE has Judaeo-Christian connotations. I remember learning that CE is variously interpreted as "Christian Era" and "Common Era". I had not thought about the POV inherent in "Common Era"; but there it is—implicitly elevating the divergence of Christianity from Judaism above the foundation of Islam or some other cusp that is significant to a social/cultural/religious group. I now see the AD/BC vs CE/BCE divide in the same light as British and American spellings. Some people prefer one; some the other. Neither is wrong nor more right. --[[User:TheoClarke|Theo ]] [[User_talk:TheoClarke|(Talk)]] 23:46, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Thanks for the compliment. I too have heard of "Christian Era" and frankly have no objection to that. I thought I anticipated your argument in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Fourth_Reason:_Essentially_POV] and wonder if you have a more specific response to that section. If I understand your argument, though, before concluding that "BC" and "BCE" represent two different points of view, I would point out that "BC" and "BCE" refer to different "facts" (or "fact-claims") BC represents the fact-claim that Jesus was Christ. BCE represents the fact-claim that we live in a world dominated by the Christian calendar, but not by the Christian religion. I think these are two different kinds of fact-claims; the first is a contentious POV, the other is a pretty uncontentious description of the world today. This is one reason I think BC ''is'' a "point of view" but "BCE" ''is not'' a "point of view. By the way, I do not understand what you mean that BCE/CE represents a view that elevates "the divergence of Christianity from Judaism above the foundation of Islam or some other cusp that is significant to a social/cultural/religious group." I don't think it does, and didn't think that I suggested this. I think BCE/CE acknowledges the divergence of Christianity from Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc., and the elevation of a calendar devised by Christians and shared by non-Christians. Am I misunderstanding you, or are you misunderstanding me? I know that much of what I wrote comes from a Jewish point of view because I am Jewish and want to be clear about my point of view. But I do think that much of what I wrote would be shared by a Muslim, Hindu, or atheist, and has nothing to do with Judaism. I guess I thought of the references to a Jewish POV as ''examples'' rather than primary evidence or major elements of the argument. I think that Jews, Muslims, Hindus all have more reasonable grounds to not want to use the words "Before Christ" or "Anno DOmini" than Christians have for not wanting to say "Common Era" or "Before the Common Era." I also know many examples I got from other websites refer to the split between Judaism and Christianity, but I think that is because in the US, and in Europe (until recently, that is) the Jews were ''the'' exemplary "minority group" or at least minority religion. Again, I see this as an example of a larger argument, not the argument itself. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:29, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Specifically, I disagree with you that BCE is neutral. |
|||
::The widely held belief that Jesus is/was Christ by the community that established the modern Western calendar is as inherent to the use of the chosen fixed point in that calendar as is the use of the abbreviation BC. Very few people say "Before Christ" in this context; almost everyone says "beecee". And whilst popularity may not be a good guide to NPOV, it is a certain guide to convention. |
|||
::The reason why I think that BCE/CE represents a view that elevates "the divergence of Christianity from Judaism above the foundation of Islam or some other cusp that is significant to a social/cultural/religious group" is that you characterised the "Common Era" as that which was shared by Christians and Jews. I accept that it is also that shared by Hindus and and Buddhists. It is not, however, shared with Islam. Whilst I do not wish to advocate anything so absurd, the truly NPOV solution is to cite each year as AD/AH/CE and any other major calendar system. I am not advocating that we write "Before Christ" or "Anno Domini" against every date; I think that AD/BC are widely accepted conventional labels largely divorced from their original sense. And, since some readers find them offensive, we should allow editors to use whatever form with which they are most comfortable and, just as we do with dates and spelling, we should either enable the choice to be a software-supported user preference or respect the established usage within each separate article. |
|||
::I imagine that the "many examples [that you] got from other websites refer to the split between Judaism and Christianity" because (according to my hazy recollections of my undergraduate studies) CE/BCE was originally a construct by Judaic scholars who were working outside the Jewish academic community. |
|||
::--[[User:TheoClarke|Theo ]] [[User_talk:TheoClarke|(Talk)]] 01:09, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Hmmm, as I explained in the proposal, it looks like Christians actually devised the BCE/CE system a hundred (or more) years ago. Also, I ''never'' wrote that the Gregorian calendar is shared "only" by Christians and Jews, or shared by Christians and Jews "alone" — or even, shared by Christians and Jews period. Every time I talked about the calendar being shared, I mentioned other people besides Jews. Also, I do believe it is shared by Mulsims as well. I do ''not'' mean that in Muslim countries or in Muslims' personal lives Muslims use anything other than AH, but Muslims do participate in global political, economic, and cultural events and surely in these use the Gregorian calendar, as I suggested, for convenience and as a convention. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 01:24, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
As I noted on the talkpage for Jesus, Wikipedia does not ''exclude'' POVs, which is what you are seeking to do. NPOV specifically does not call for us to write in a "neutral" way. The policy even explicitly says that is not what we do. It calls for us to express all views. The view that 4 BC is, erm, 4 BC is widely held and that should be reflected. I agree that the view that that is not acceptable should also be reflected and it's my belief that 4 BC/BCE shows that. I think that the discussion is very much complicated by the fact that it's largely those offended who interpret the dating system as having to do with "our Lord" or "the Messiah". I'm among those who just sees them as just letters, whose significance is gone -- dead metaphors, if you will. I'm afraid I believe that this sort of argument that views that some find offensive must be excluded must be opposed ''strenuously'' because it so flatly contradicts NPOV policy. [[User:Grace Note|Grace Note]] 00:35, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Grace Note, I agree that Wikipedia should not exclude POVs, and I thought I stated clearly in the proposal itself that I think BC and AD should be used when appropriate. My only objection is to when they are presented not as a POV (a POV you are right to say should not be excluded as such), but as '''N'''POV. As to your seeing them just as letters, well, that confuses me because then you are saying that they do not express a POV, when you started out defending including POVs in the article. In any case, I just want to remind you that the whole purpose of NPOV is to deal with the fact that not all people think the same. I believe you when you say they are just letters to you. But to other people, they are not just letters. This situation requires an NPOV solution, right? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:55, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
This quote is from our NPOV policy. It explains why we can't make exclusions, why we have to cater to more than one POV. Our style guide does not say we should use one form over the other. The only way to be neutral is to use both, as using either by itself obviously makes some people unhappy. It has been shown on the [[Jesus]] article how both forms can be used in the one article quite successfully. Those who are fighting to have "their way" are the ones who are violating the Wikipedia spirit. We need to be accepting of the views, feelings and beliefs of every reader of Wikipedia (keeping in mind this is the ''English'' Wikipedia), which is why we can't ignore BCE/CE, and which is why we can't put aside BC/AD.<br> |
|||
"''There is another reason to commit ourselves to this policy. Namely, when it is clear to readers that we do not expect them to adopt any particular opinion, this leaves them free to make up their minds for themselves, thus encouraging intellectual independence. Totalitarian governments and dogmatic institutions everywhere might find reason to be opposed to Wikipedia, if we succeed in adhering to our non-bias policy: the presentation of many competing theories on a wide variety of subjects suggests that we, the creators of Wikipedia, trust readers' competence to form their own opinions themselves. Texts that present multiple viewpoints fairly, without demanding that the reader accept any one of them, are liberating. Neutrality subverts dogmatism, and nearly everyone working on Wikipedia can agree this is a good thing.''" --[[User:Silversmith|Silversmith]] 01:41, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Silversmith is, as usual disingenuous. I responded to this argument here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Fourth_Reason:_Essentially_POV]. He either has not taken the time to read it (in which case, why comment?), has not understood it (in which case, why comment), or has no response to my argument (in which case he will just repeat himself — oops, that is what he is doing now). What is certain is that Silversmith does not ''understand'' or NPOV policy, as he takes quotes out of context and tries to apply them inappropriately. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 01:58, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Slrubenstein, it would appear you have not understood what ''I'' have written. If you did, you would realize that we are almost arguing the same thing, just slightly diferently, becuase you are saying lets use both "where appropriate", whilst I'm saying use both together, or at the least don't put a preference of one over the other. Since I'm so fond of repeating myself you may want to look at [[Wikipedia:Writers' rules of engagement]] and also our [[Wikipedia:No personal attacks]] policy in regards to [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AJesus&diff=13766382&oldid=13766354| some of your comments.] Please try and be civil, particularly as I'm the one who suggested what you are doing here in the first place [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Jesus#Proposal], to which you replied at the time: "I do not see the point to or value of this proposal." You seem determined to oppose everything I say without regard, then accuse me of not reading or understanding what you write. --[[User:Silversmith|Silversmith]] 03:08, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Silversmith, I appreciate your patient reply and do apologize for letting my feelings of frustration get the best of my. Maybe it is true that I misunderstand you, but I ''assure'' you I do read what you write, and ''try'' to understand it. I am sorry I questioned your respect for my words. Be that as it may, I still disagree with you and if you are willing to put more time into it, I'd like to explain to you why. The easiest way to do this is for you to go to this article's talk page (I think [[Wikipedia talk:Neutral point of view/BCE-CE Debate]]. Tomer makes a point similar to yours, and I provide a lengthy — but, I earnestly hope, apropos – response that I think also responds to your comments here. In the end we may still disagree, but if you have the time to read my response to Tomer on the talk page, I would like to know what you think. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 04:58, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
From the [[Chicago Manual of Style]] [http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/cmosfaq/cmosfaq.Abbreviations.html]: |
|||
:''Q. Do you recommend the use of BCE (Before the Common Era) and CE (Common Era) instead of BC and AD? Has the debate about these been settled or is it still in flux?'' |
|||
:''A. We are not aware of any intense debate. The choice between one or the other is up to the writer and should be flagged only if the customs of a specific field or community seem to be in danger of being (unwittingly) violated. Many authors use BC and AD because they are familiar and conventionally understood. Those who want to avoid reference to Christianity are free to do so.'' |
|||
Which is pretty much how I feel about it. BCE/CE is the most neutral and most scholarly, let's just go with that. But it's not a big deal either way, unless we are hell-bent on making it one. --[[User:Fastfission|Fastfission]] 01:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
As a non-Christian non-Jew non-Muslim, I'm not greatly bothered by "B.C.". I have always assumed, perhaps ignorantly, that "Jesus" and "Christ" were two names of the same person. In any case, I don't much care about the difference and the sense of "before Jesus" is clearly correct (give or take the calendrical error). |
|||
"A.D." however, is another matter. It is clearly P.O.V. to refer to any year as "the year of our lord" in full, scarcely less to write that in Latin, and I don't think the abbreviation loses all of that sense. —[[User:Ashley Y|Ashley Y]] 01:52, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
:FYI, "Christ" is a title, not a name. It is the Greek word for the Hebrew "Moshiach," which is translated into English as "Messiah." Jews (at least, back then) thought the messiah was a King who would liberate the Jews from Roman rule (that never happened). Christians believe the messiah saves humanity from its sins. I am guessing you do not believe that Jesus was messiah in either of these senses. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:12, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
I don't want to sound glib (although I would like to lighten the mood a bit if possible)...both BC/AD and B/CE are POV, as are any other proposals. While "time" is not a human construct, "history" and its perception clearly are, and always will be. And a little more of my POV: Messiah comes from the Hebrew word "mashiach". Moshi's ach is Aharon. :-p [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 02:30, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Okay, you got me to smile with that one — a biiig smile. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:51, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
This is obviously something that [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] feels very strongly about, and I would like to thank him for a cogent and thorough discussion of the issues. However, I don't think there is any way of escaping the fact that both BC/AD and BCE/CE are both POV. One reflecting millenia of Christian influence on western thought and life, and the other a reflection of the growing diversity of modern life and a not so subtle statement that it is wrong to impose Christian views on other cultures. Of course, even BCE/CE does not avoid the Christian heritage of the year one. [If people really wanted to avoid religious overtones, we'd probably switch to something more like the geologic calendar, where everything is measured in years before 1950 (a fairly arbitrary date). Of course, talking about living in annum -55 does feel a little awkward.] Though both BCE/CE and BC/AD strike me as POV, I am willing to concede that BCE/CE is probably a marginal improvement over BC/AD. But whatever its marginal virtue, it doesn't escape the fact that it is still far less common and less understood in the everyday world, the world for which Wikipedia is written. For me, I can't justify making Wikipedia less readable for a marginal improvment in POV. Maybe someday most people will understand BCE/CE and it will be a sensible switch, but in my opinion that is probably at least a generation of school children away. Sorry. [[User:Dragons flight|Dragons flight]] 03:03, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:The argument that something should not be because the commoner will not understand is fallacious and invalid on Wikipedia, where subjects such subjects can be linked to, written and read about. By the way, BC/AD is [[religiocentrism|religiocentric]] or as some writers have described, [[Christocentrism|Christocentric]]. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 03:16, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::No apology needed, and I do appreciate your kind remarks. If I may, I would like to ask you to think about changing your vote — not now, not today, just think about it for a while. I ask for two reasons. First, you write "Though both BCE/CE and BC/AD strike me as POV, I am willing to concede that BCE/CE is probably a marginal improvement over BC/AD." and in NPOV issues I think even a marginal improvement is worth it, since the policy is a pillar of Wikipedia. But I also ask because I take seriously your observation that BCE and CE are less common than AD and BC. I am not going to rehash my argument about popularity and NPOV [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_2:_Popularity]. But I do ask that you reflect on the first pillar of Wikipedia: that this is an encyclopedia. I do not mean to patronize, but let me quote the first paragraph of our article on the topic: |
|||
:::An '''encyclopedia''' (alternatively '''encyclopaedia/encyclopædia''') is a written [[compendium]] of [[knowledge]]. The term comes from the [[Greek language|Greek]] εγκύκλιος παιδεία (''enkuklios paideia''), literally "in a circle of instruction", and more generally connoting "a well-rounded education". |
|||
::I ask you only to consider the importance of our project as a ''means'' of educating people about things (including issues in scholarly, ethical, and political debate) they do not yet know. Respectfully [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::The analogy I would give is the following. When one is describing, for example, the wildlife in an article on [[Africa]] it might be technically correct and in some sense instructive to use scientific names for lions, rhinos, giraffes, etc. However, saying Panthera leo, Diceros bicornis, and Giraffa camelopardalis is going to be hard for most people to recognize and contribute very little to the article. In most contexts, I feel basically the same way about BCE/CE. I don't see any reason why someone reading an article on, for example, the [[History of ancient Egypt]] or [[Language]] should have to stop to go find out what CE/BCE mean. In some sense using CE/BCE is instructional and, in my opinion, more NPOV but this virtue is offset by the fact that the common person who wants to learn about Egypt or language would find the article harder to understand. I strongly agree that Wikipedia is a means of educating people, but in my opinion this means that general articles need to be accessible to a general audience and not bogged down in terminology that the typical reader might have trouble with. Obviously, there are some contexts where the CE/BCE vs. AD/BC distinction is worth making and explaining (e.g. [[Jesus]]), but in my opinion these are the exception rather than the rule. [[User:Dragons flight|Dragons flight]] |
|||
:::In response to Adraeus's comment that it should be sufficient to link BCE/CE, so that an uninformed reader can read more, I would also add that even when BCE/CE is used, I rarely see it linked in an informative way. Common practice is to write dates like [[1000 BCE]] which simply points to [[1000 BC]] and provides no explanation for where BCE comes from other than letting a reader guess that BCE = BC. For dates like [[250]] CE, maybe someone would think to link <nowiki>[[Common Era|CE]]</nowiki>, but in my observation it is simply more common to leave it unliked or even leave off the AD/CE so that dates are assumed to be common era unless labelled BC/BCE. So not only does it seem to me to be undesirable to force readers to learn about dating conventions in order to learn about unrelated topics, but in practice we do not often make it easy for them to do so. This is not a very strong argument since people like Slrubenstein may be inclined to search through Wikipedia and ensure that BCE/CE are linked everywhere they occur. However, if one is going to create policy that makes things harder on the typical reader and harder on the typical editor (e.g. ensuring that links are provided whenever CE/BCE is used), then you ought to have a strong reason for it. In my judgment, the marginal improvment in POV does not fall in that category. [[User:Dragons flight|Dragons flight]] 09:50, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
I propose to remove from Wikipedia all instances of "etc." because it is in Latin and therefore conveys a matter of opinion about the relative superiority of Latin over English, which is an abhorrent violation of our NPOV policy. While we're at it, let's change all instances of "he or she" to "sie" because the use of the former embodies a value statement about the number of actual genders there are in humanity, which is again a gross violation of NPOV policy. Oh, strike that, my use of 'humanity' there is POV because animals are people too, and to exclude them from consideration is awfully POV. Oh, and aliens too. It is argued by some people (weasel words, I know) that aliens exist and are sentient. Maybe they only have one gender? This reinforces that we must remove "he" and "she" from articles. We have a NPOV policy specifically for situations like this. But seriously, if BC/AD comprises an NPOV violation, BCE/CE is just as much a violation of NPOV. It implies that the common era (which suggests modern development) began with the birth of Jesus, since that is where the Gregorian calendar supposedly begins. CE therefore says to people "this modern era of development started with the birth of Jesus". The calendar is a religious calendar inherently, and attempting to remove any reference to religion by simply renaming the notation for it is silly. The only way to remove any existing POV would be for Wikipedia to make up its own calendar. Anyway, the result of this poll probably won't be binding (it has no quorum provision). - [[User:Mark|Mark]] 03:47, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:You write "But seriously, if BC/AD comprises an NPOV violation, BCE/CE is just as much a violation of NPOV. It implies that the common era (which suggests modern development) began with the birth of Jesus, since that is where the Gregorian calendar supposedly begins." You are mistaken. It is not the term BCE/CE that suggests that the common era starts with Jesus' birth, it is the fact that many non-Christians actually use the Gregorian calendar that proves that this is a common era. BCE/CE only reflects that fact. Or did you not read my proposael, especially here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_3:_We_Would_Also_Have_to_Reject_the_Gregorian_Calendar] which refutes your point? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:51, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::No, I did not read your proposal thoroughly. You're not the only person to suggest switching entirely to BCE/CE, and to tell you the truth it gets tiring having to read through the same arguments and vote on the same thing time and time again. As [[Common Era]] points out, the two terms are synonymous. The connotations that come with the terms are largely the same. Following your reasoning in the section you reference above, the term "Common Era" is POV because it implies the birth of Christ brought about a new era of cooperation between Judaism and Christianity and international harmony. Or something like that. As I see it, the only POV reduction that such a change could bring about is AD meaning "in the year of '''the''' Lord". That's POV, I agree. - [[User:Mark|Mark]] 04:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Well Mark, I appreciate your forthright reply. For what it is worth I want to clarify one thing: I am not suggesting that "the term "Common Era" is POV because it implies the birth of Christ brought about a new era of cooperation between Judaism and Christianity and international harmony." What I wrote was this: that common era implies that many non-Christians use the Gregorian calendar "in common" (and the reason for my proposal is that they nevertheless do not hold Christian faith in common). I think both claims are accurate facts, and I do not claim anything more than that. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 04:51, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::No, I did not misunderstand you. I merely meant that even if we adopted your policy, there would still be some POV in the nomenclature. I respect what you are saying, and agree with it to a small extent, but disagree that it should become Wikipedia policy to make BCE/CE standard. - [[User:Mark|Mark]] 05:16, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
[[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]], you are a dishonest bastard. After I showed on [[Talk:Jesus]] that your argument had nothing to do with existing [[Wikipedia:neutral point of view policy]], but rather deals only with your notions of what would be "culturally neutral language", you try to stack the deck in your favor by creating a page that claims in its title that this is a "neutral point of view" debate. [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 03:40, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:You have a right to think I am dishonest. But to call me a bastard is a violation of our [[Wikipedia:No personal attacks|personal attack]] policy. In any event, you did not show this on the [[Talk:Jesus]] page. On the contrary, I explained in detail why you are wrong, wrong, wrong. As to your "trying to stack the deck" complaint, it is just pathetic. I am proposing a revision of a policy, as is every editor's right. Anyone has a right to disagree with me, and I created sections here in which people could express their reasons for opposing the proposal, and in which they could vote against the proposal. Please explain to me in what universe this constitutes "stacking the deck." Or do you not really know what that phrase means? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:47, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::You did not "explain in detail why you are wrong, wrong, wrong." You answered in one sentence which wandered off in some other direction. |
|||
::You deliberately tried to stack the deck in several ways |
|||
::*The title of the article, which presupposes the fact that the debate is about neutral point of view. |
|||
::*By phrasing it as a "defense of BC/AD" |
|||
::*In your characterization of that "defense" as only people claiming that "it is NPOV" for one of four reasons, and ignoring the fact that several people who have argued against it don't make any such claim, but rather claim that this is not something that is covered by the [[Wikipedia:neutral point of view]] policy. |
|||
::*By deleting my comment pointing out that this is not the case. |
|||
::Those are just some of the more obvious ways. [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 07:57, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::It is good to avoid hypocrisy. Don't tell Gene to avoid personal attacks if you are going to [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AJesus&diff=13560733&oldid=13560551 slur others without apology]<!-- by throwing around the word "anti-Semitism"-->. — [[User:Chameleon|''Chameleon'']] 04:25, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:The reason I haven't apologized is because it was not a slur but an objective and I thought constructive comment. You wrote, "after Jayjg attempted to, let's say, stuff the ballot box by writing to as many Jewish editors as possible" which is playing the race card. As a matter of fact, we do not know the race of all the people who participate in the discussion, and many of the people Jayjg communicated with are not Jewish. But just means you are getting your facts wrong. The reason I characterized your comment as "vague anti-Semitism" (and I used "vague" deliberately) is because of the insinuation that people would oppose your position because they are Jewish — as if they cannot have other reasons, reasons shared by many Wikipedians. Even if I were not Jewish, I would be making this proposal, and many non-Jews support it. Don't bring editors' race into it, it is offensive. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 04:46, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Don't be an [[wiktionary:Offendocrat]]. You still haven't apologised for the personal attack. — [[User:Chameleon|''Chameleon'']] 05:17, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::Don't be a [[victim]]. Our decisions define us. We must be responsible for our behavior in order to co-exist with those who share this world with us. Our behavior, our actions, is our responsibility; thus, if you are offended by a comment and you seek an apology, then perhaps you should ask yourself, "Why do I seek apology from those I can forgive for the trespasses I perceive?" To perceive something as offensive is ''emotionally irresponsible'', and to describe something as offensive is ''objectively inconsiderate''. Have you thought critically on the context in which the perceived offensive comment was written? Have you considered that you are capable of err and may have misperceived the intent of the so-called offender? Before you question the integrity of another, I dare you to question your own. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 07:24, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::::What a load of irrelevant rubbish. This has nothing to do with whether I am "capable of err", but with having a level playing field. If the No Personal Attacks policy stops me from saying something like "Slrubenstein is a religious bigot", it has to stop him calling me an anti-Semite. — [[User:Chameleon|''Chameleon'']] 11:37, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
I don't claim it is NPOV. I claim that [[neutral point of view]] is totally irrelevant to this argument. [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 03:43, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Yeah, yeah. And I have explained why you are wrong. (and these comments from a guy who doesn't even know the difference between mass and weight!) [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:55, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
====Question for those who believe BC/AD is not POV==== |
|||
(Creating a subsection to General Discussion which is obviously becoming lengthy) |
|||
Question for those who believe BC/AD is not POV: Would you feel the same if the acronymns appended to the year stood for a sanskrit abbreviation that meant "I offer my respectful obeisances unto Lord Krishna"? Would you argue that it's been commonly used for centuries and most people don't know what the acronymn really stands for anyway? --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 05:52, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:Or to put it in perspective, what if BC meant "Before the birth of the Messiah Krishna", and AD meant "In the year of our Lord Krishna"? --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 06:04, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::<s>Well, I don't have an issue with Easter being on the date of a pagan holiday. So I guess not. - [[User:Ta bu shi da yu|Ta bu shi da yu]] 06:51, 16 May 2005 (UTC)</s> I am misinformed about [[Easter]] (double checked the Wikipedia article). However, if it was in common parlance then I would not have an issue with it. It would not mean that I am condoning the religion. Looking at 1 Corinthians 8, I see that Paul wrote that "So then, about eating food sacrificed to idols: We know that an idol is nothing at all in the world and that there is no God but one. For even if there are so-called gods, whether in heaven or on earth (as indeed there are many 'gods' and many 'lords'), yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we live.". - [[User:Ta bu shi da yu|Ta bu shi da yu]] 07:01, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
::Absolutely no problem with it. That's why I gladly use the standard English names for the days of the week despite their origins in a belief system to which I do not adhere. It's the same scenario. [[User:Alanyst|Alanyst]] 07:32, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
:::But, for example, if "Thorsday" was actually worded "The Day of our Lord and Messiah Thor" and Western society was dominated by followers of Nordic myth who believed Thor was god, would you be against a cultural trend toward a more neutral term that described the fifth day of the week? --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 07:48, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
'''A personal comment''': I have no argument with people voting as they wish. But I am disappointed that — with the exception of some exceptionally thoughtful comments (as many or as more opposed as in favor) – the discussion centers on the very first paragraph of the proposal, and no one has yet to argue for or against any of the specific arguments and reasons detailed in the proposal. I think this is an embarrasment to the level of wiki-dialogue. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 06:03, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
*Hey! I read the whole thing! (Several times in fact...) What I'm seeing is that most of the commentary doesn't sound like people haven't ''read'' it, but that they've developed an ''opinion'' about it and begun formulating a response to it by the end of the first paragraph...and that the paragraphs that follow do little, if anything, to sway their positions. Then again, there are the same argumentative antagonists from [[Talk:Jesus]] who appear to be reading as little here as they were there. OK, that's my personal comment. I really shouldn't be talking in this section anyways, since I never said I thought BC/AD wasn't POV. :-p [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 06:15, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
==== [[User:Alanyst|Alanyst]]'s response ==== |
|||
I think I need to clarify my position as represented by Slrubenstein above (search for my username in the page to find those instances). I hasten to add that I believe any misrepresentations he made were done in good faith. |
|||
First of all, I wish to make clear that it is ''only'' my sense of style, and not my belief system, that is offended by the BCE/CE nomenclature. I have tried to make clear that I consider BC/AD and BCE/CE '''equally''' NPOV, and from that premise argue against BCE/CE on stylistic grounds only. The bulk of my contribution to this debate has been to show how BC/AD can have a neutral meaning, which is a proposition with which Slrubenstein and others disagree. |
|||
Slrubenstein equates my statement "It's so widely used that it no longer identifies the religious POV of the author who uses it. Hence its usage is NPOV, even if its historical meaning is not." to the "it's popular" argument. I base my argument not on the ''number'' of people who have used it, but the ''diversity'' of people who have used it under interpretations that are clearly different from the POV meaning that Slrubenstein et al. assign as the exclusive meaning for those terms. I am confident that many non-Christians, including Jews, Muslims, and atheists, have both read and used the BC/AD terminology without concerns about misrepresenting their own beliefs. (Some of the opponents of this proposal include themselves in this group by their comments below.) This shows that BC/AD can be both used and interpreted in a neutral way. I do not believe that Slrubenstein has addressed this argument. |
|||
This does not discount the fact that some ''are'' offended by the BC/AD terminology, Slrubenstein being representative of such. The problem is that the fact that someone is offended by some particular term does not inherently make that using that term a violation of NPOV. If it were, Wikipedia could be shut down by people maliciously claiming to be offended at everything that was written. (I do not claim that those offended by BC/AD are malicious.) Clearly, though a person's taking offense may be ''indicative'' of POV, it is insufficient to establish it. |
|||
For a vote on a 3rd option see [[/Alternatives]]. |
|||
I am not satisfied with the attempts to explain the difference between BC/AD and Thursday. Quoting Slrubenstein's argument: |
|||
:As to the question, why is it that BC/AD express an unconscious bias when "Thursday" does not? Because there aren't many worshipers of Thor these days, and because if worshipers of Thor went around the world converting people to Thor-worship or killing them, it was a very very long time ago. But it was not at all long ago that Christians killed non-Christians, and quite recently that Christians went around the world trying to convert non-Christians; indeed, it still happens today. You can't compare AD with Thursday because the contexts are so different. |
|||
This argument conflicts with another statement of Slrubenstein's: |
|||
:But more importantly, how wide-spread a practice is simply has nothing to do with NPOV. |
|||
And it seems further to suffer from a fatal injection of POV from Slrubenstein himself: that BC/AD is POV because of the crimes committed in the name of Christianity against non-Christians. Not only does this ignore crimes committed in the other direction, but it also suggests that any symbol or term that originated in Christianity is tainted with POV that only becomes neutral when one can say "there aren't very many worshipers of Christ these days" and "if worshipers of Christ went around converting people to Christianity or killing them, it was a very very long time ago." The real distinction between BC/AD and Thursday is that Slrubenstein and others perceive Christianity to be a threat, and Thor-worship is not so perceived. But this is of course not an objective reason for rejecting one and accepting the other. |
|||
==Votes== |
|||
Finally, Slrubenstein's entire argument is based on one major presupposition: that "400 AD" represents a [[proposition]]—a statement with a truth value—and not just a date value. In other words, "400 AD" is equivalent in his interpretation as "400 CE and Jesus is Lord". While he is free to treat each occurrence of BC or AD as a proposition, he is not free to impose this way of thinking on everyone else. '''In the modern English vernacular, BC and AD are simply date markers, not logical propositions.''' This is the clearest way I can think of to state my argument that BC/AD are neutral terms in the English vernacular, and since that is the language of the English Wikipedia, BC/AD is NPOV. |
|||
See [[/Votes]]. |
|||
==Alternative Solution== |
|||
I do sincerely thank Slrubenstein for his efforts spent in placing this debate in a more appropriate arena of discourse than the [[Talk:Jesus]] page. [[User:Alanyst|Alanyst]] 07:02, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
Wouldn’t it be easier if we simply used BC ("Before Christ") and AC ("After Christ")? |
|||
[[User:Kiumars|Kiumars]] |
|||
:The objection to BCE/CE (whether you agree or not) is that its an attempt to foist a novel naming convention when there is nothing wrong with the traditional BC/AD. The objection to BC/AD is that it acknowledges the Christian deity (even if only the objectors are aware of it). I cannot see either side being attracted to your well-meaning suggestion [[User:ClemMcGann|ClemMcGann]] 15:30, 18 June 2006 (UTC) |
|||
::It doesn't acknowledge a Christan deity, it asserts that the Christian deity exists. --[[User:OldakQuill|Oldak]] [[User_talk:OldakQuill|Quill]] 23:31, 29 July in the 2006th "year of our Lord" (UTC) |
|||
[[Category:Wikipedia archives]] |
|||
===Votes=== |
|||
==So if we follow that logic and are consistent with it...== |
|||
''Please consider providing specific responses to specific parts of the proposal as you vote, in the '''Comments''' sections above'' |
|||
So if we follow that logic and are consistent with it, then we should do an overhaul in the sciences and mathematics: astronomy (Mercury, Venus, Mars etc.), chemistry, (e.g. "Thorium" comes from "Thor", "Uranium" "Uranus", "Plutonium" "Pluto"), "Hypnosis" comes from the Greek God "Hypnos"; English days of the week ["Tuesday" from "Týr", "Wednesday" from "Wuodan" (Old English for "Odin") etc.] If you are going to eliminate/change terms solely because they have a religious connotation and people are "offended" by it, then apply the same standard to the rest of the English Language and the sciences and other academia. |
|||
'''It is important to note that a majority against the proposal cannot be construed as a majority in support of using BC and AD exclusively.''' |
|||
Anything and everything is "offensive" if one thinks hard enough or wants it to be true. And whose feelings of offense should take precedence, the religious or nonreligious? |
|||
====Votes in favor of the proposal==== |
|||
# [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] |
|||
# Clear, thorough. [[User:Stevertigo|SV]]|[[User_talk:Stevertigo|t]] 23:05, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Jfdwolff|JFW]] | [[User_talk:Jfdwolff|<small>T@lk</small>]] 23:21, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# A beautiful argument. [[User:SlimVirgin|SlimVirgin]] <sup><font color="Purple">[[User_talk:SlimVirgin|(talk)]]</font></sup> 23:40, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# The BCE/CE system is more logical. Plus you eliminate people using AD incorrectly ("2003 AD," rather than the proper "AD 2003"). [[User:Neutrality|Neutrality]]<sup>[[User talk:Neutrality|talk]]</sup> 00:03, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#--[[User:Mrfixter|Mrfixter]] 00:14, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Eloquence|Eloquence]][[User:Eloquence/CP|*]] 00:19, May 16, 2005 (UTC) (but a software solution might be preferable) |
|||
# The least POV solution to the issue of dates. [[User:Guettarda|Guettarda]] 00:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Olve|Olve]] 00:44, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:El C|El_C]] 00:49, 16 May 2005 (UTC) [<small>Because the professional scholarship seems to prefer it. I have no strong opinion otherwise.</small>] |
|||
# --[[User:Leifern|Leifern]] 00:51, May 16, 2005 (UTC) - in reading comments by those opposed, I am struck by the tendency among people to turn down a proposal no matter how reasonable it is, for no good reason at all. You're already dealt with each of their objections in detail, but they just bring them back up again, as if they were brand new. |
|||
# Respectful to non-Christian cultures [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 00:53, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
# Magnificently argued. Would it be that all policy debates possessed such eloquence. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 01:19, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 01:21, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# Most professionals think the full transition to BCE/CE is just a matter of time, and having a religiously neutral standard certainly seems like the more NPOV thing to do, even though I don't think it is ''much'' of a POV either way. [[User:Fastfission|Fastfission]] 01:40, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Fredrik|Fredrik]] | [[User talk:Fredrik|talk]] 01:41, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# —[[User:Ashley Y|Ashley Y]] 01:53, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
# I think that the abbreviations should be linked to a concise page explaining the issue. --[[User:Goethean|goethean]] 01:54, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# An academic and professional standard, and just plain polite. [[User:Zora|Zora]] 02:12, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# Throughout my (British) education the secular terms have been at least as common as the Christian terms. [[User:Steinsky|Joe D]] [[User talk:Steinsky|(t)]] 02:13, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Srs|srs]] 02:22, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:BrokenSegue|'''B'''roken]][[User talk:BrokenSegue|'''S'''egue]] 02:32, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# Modern standard. [[User:Variable|siafu]] 03:02, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Flyers13|Flyers13]] 03:13, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Johansosa|Johansosa]] We need a standardized true method of dating, BC stands for "before christ" ..but we have no idea what day or year christ was really born. If someone digs up stone tablets that allows us to figure out the exact day of christ's birth are we still going to stick by the same BC/AD systyem knowing it's "inaccurate"? When someone looks up the origin of "before common era" etc. they will find out the influence that christianity had on the dating system. I don't think anything we're diluting anything. Christianity should survive independent of what we choose to call the dates. |
|||
#:*Clearly...since Christianity flourished under other dating systems for centuries prior to the invention of the numbering system now in use...[[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 03:52, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Mgw|Mgw]]...I agree with [[User:Jdforrester|James F]] that this is not a perfect solution becuase it perpetuates much of the POV of BC/AD, but I believe that this is nevertheless the most sensible thing to do. |
|||
#--[[User:Semorrison|ScottMorrison]] 04:23, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# Agreed on all points. CE and BCE are widely used by scholars and show that we take neutrality seriously here. --[[User:Fubar Obfusco|FOo]] 04:26, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Should we use the Muslim calendar for Muslim articles or the Jewish calendar for Jewish articles? --[[User:Sunborn|<font color="black">metta</font>]], [[User_talk:Sunborn|<font color="red">The Sunborn</font>]] 05:27, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Not as such, in my opinion — because like the [[Jesus]] article Jewish and Muslim articles should be written in an NPOV way, using NPOV conventions. ''However'', I do believe that any representation of a Jewish POV or a Muslim POV should use the Jewish and Muslim calendars, respetively (just as I believe that in any text that is meant to express a Christian POV, BC and AD are perfectly appropriate). [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:43, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Well articulated proposal, BCE/CE is NPOV because it makes no religious claims. Question for those who believe BC/AD is not POV: Would you feel the same if the acronymns appended to the year stood for a sanskrit abbreviation that meant "I offer my respectful obeisances unto Lord Krishna"? Would you argue that it's been commonly used for centuries and most people don't know what the acronymn really stands for anyway? --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 05:34, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Great question — could you place it in the general discussion question, or ask it of particular people? I fear they won't notice it here ... [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:40, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*Done, invitation for discussion [[Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Question_for_those_who_believe_BC.2FAD_is_not_POV|here]]. --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 05:55, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Wonderful proposal.--[[User:Che y Marijuana|<nowiki></nowiki>]] <small><small><small>[http://www.revolutionaryleft.com Revolutionary Left]</small></small></small> | [[User:Che y Marijuana|Che y Marijuana]] 05:38, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Very well-written! Clearly in the spirit of Wikipedia (though a software solution could accomplish the same thing, and please even more people).[[User:Dovi|Dovi]] 05:52, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#An encyclopedia should strive to be scholastic in approach, and BCE/CE are scholasticly preferable. [[User:Whig|Whig]] 06:47, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#The BC/AD notation is offensive to some non-Christians. Someone used interpretation of BCE/CE (before/common era) as "Before Christian Era/Christian Era" as an argument for BC/AD, but IMO that is a better argument for BCE/CE. [[User:Humus sapiens|<nowiki></nowiki>]]←[[User:Humus sapiens|Humus sapiens]]←[[User talk:Humus_sapiens|Talk]] 07:07, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#BC/AD is certainly POV. BCE/CE may also be, but raises the issue in the discussion instead of hiding it in commonality. - [[User:UtherSRG|UtherSRG]] 07:15, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#I consider the entire BCE/CE thing to be frivolous PC crap, but that's just me. NPOV is more important. -- [[User:Ran|ran]] ([[User talk:Ran|talk]]) 07:17, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#The question of whether BC/AD is POV or offensive to some doesn't exactly keep me awake nights; however I think it is a good idea to standardize usage. This is an encyclopedia and, AFAIK, virtually all modern historians and scientists use CE and BCE in dating. The AD in particular is an artifact because it translate to "Year of Our Lord," if we were to spell that out instead the Latin initialism each time, the point would be a little sharper. As to both AD and BC, they are not even an accurate religious date, since it seems that Christ was born 6 years prior to the year used as the dividing point, since that point represented a "best guess" when it was established. I can't see using AD and BC in articles "from a Christian perspective." That could be a real can of worms in itself. Do we date articles about the modern middle east by the Hebrew calendar when discussing an event from a Jewish perspective? Would we have an article about battles during the Crusades with AD/BC when discussing the Christian perspective but by the Muslim calendar when discussing the Muslim perspective? BC/BCE, IMO, is more professional in an encyclopedic context. '''Oh!''' A reasonable exception, of course, is direct quotes. -- [[User:Cecropia|Cecropia]] | [[User talk:Cecropia|''explains it all'' ®]] 07:24, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#about time.--[[User:Eion|Eion]] 07:27, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#BC/BCE is de facto in the academic community. --[[User:Eienmaru|Eienmaru]] 08:07, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Ambi|Ambi]] 08:40, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Making this a style sheet issue would be best. But CE/BCE is preferable to AD/BC. [[User:Arbor|Arbor]] 08:51, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Andrevan|<b><font color="mediumblue">Andre</font></b>]] ([[User_talk:Andrevan|<font color=royalblue>talk</font>]]) 11:49, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#In the absence of a Universal dating system, using BCE/CE is a courtesy to non-Christian users, and demonstrates a sensitivity to other cultures, by avoiding the explicit (even if abbreviated) reference to "Christ" or "Domini", and the forced acknowledgement it implies (although, of course, the starting point is kept the same, but that is then only a matter of convenient convention). If I was contributing history articles to an Arab-country site I would resent having to refer to [[Muhammad]]'s [[Hijra (Islam)|Hijra]] every time I write a date: it would feel like religious intoxication. Or imagine if Japan was forcing everybody dealing with Japan to comply to its Imperial Eras dating system! BCE/CE is a very sensible solution, already accepted by most of the scientific community. [[User:PHG|PHG]] 11:59, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
[[User:Wizymon|Wizymon]] ([[User talk:Wizymon|talk]]) 17:57, 4 November 2023 (UTC) |
|||
====Votes opposed to the proposal==== |
|||
#[[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 23:18, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Golbez|Golbez]] 23:35, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:NeilTarrant|Neo]] 23:37, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#—[[User:Wahoofive|Wahoofive]] ([[User talk:Wahoofive|talk]]) 23:34, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:RickK|Rick]][[User talk:RickK|K]] 23:44, May 15, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# As an atheist I find the thought of cloaking the imperialism of a Christian dating system behind "non-Christian" names abhorrently vile, and amazingly POV. [[User:Jdforrester|James F.]] [[User_talk:Jdforrester|(talk)]] 23:45, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#--[[User:Doc glasgow|Doc Glasgow]] 23:47, 15 May 2005 (UTC) a little reluctantly - and with the greatest respect |
|||
#:*Thanks. If you have ideas about a better solution (an alternate proposal) feel free to use this article's talk page. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:43, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:TheoClarke|Theo]] 23:47, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#--[[User:ClemMcGann|ClemMcGann]] 23:52, 15 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:David Gerard|David Gerard]] 00:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) [[m:Don't vote on everything]]. |
|||
#[[User:Jpgordon|jpgordon]][[User talk:Jpgordon|∇∆∇∆]] 00:22, 16 May 2005 (UTC) A lovely argument indeed. I wish I agreed with it. But the only possible NPOV solution would be to use Before Present dating for everything, since the only thing everyone is likely to agree on (with the possible exception of adherants to certain mystical traditions) is that Now is The Present. Since BCE is defined as BC and CE is defined as AD, just changing the name is (as said above) just putting a make-believe NPOV face on an inherantly POV concept: it makes believe, somehow, that the Common Era is not exactly congruent with the Christian Era. Now, if the abbreviations were always spoken out as "Before Christ" and "Year of Our Lord", I'd probably be arguing in the other direction. But they're not; it's just an arbitrary system, like all possible dating systems other than BP. |
|||
#:*There is one dating system on which we should ALL agree -- the UNIX clock, which started ticking in <mumble mumble>. We'll have B.U. and A.U, before Unix and after Unix. [[User:Zora|Zora]] 05:44, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*Hahaha. I actually brought this up somewhere on [[Talk:Jesus]]. and <mumble mumble> is midnight Jan. 1, 1970. (note I didn't use AD or CE!!! :-p) [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 05:53, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Obviously, you are not a geologist. The Present is not "Now", the Present is defined to be 1950. See [[Before Present]]. [[User:Dragons flight|Dragons flight]] 10:00, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*How very POV of you! UNIX trumps you tho...Time begins in the UNIX world as I've already described it. This means that Geologic time is -20Y. YOU ARE IN NEGATIVE TIME!!! Get up to speed already! :-p [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 10:12, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# This attempt to exclude a POV from Wikipedia should be opposed fiercely. What is wrong with simply putting BC/BCE where appropriate? This expresses all views. [[User:Grace Note|Grace Note]] 00:26, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Grace Note, I think I agree with you — at the very beginning I wrote that "BC ("Before Christ") and AD ("Anno Domini", "In the year of the Lord") ... should be used only when they are appropriate, that is, in the context of expressing or providing an account of a Christian point of view." I ''certainly'' do not mean to ban BC and AD from Wikipedia, only to limit their use to appropriate situations. Do we agree? Or do we disagree concerning what is "appropriate?" If we disagree about what is "appropriate," can you explain to me why? If we simply agree, can you suggest how I can express this point more clearly in the proposal? Is this your only reason for disagreeing, or do you have others? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 00:33, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Grace Note, we already have an attempt to exclude POV from Wikipedia regardless of "appropriateness". The name of that attempt is ''[[WP:NPOV|NPOV policy]]'', which ''is'' '''[[Wikipedia:Policies_and_guidelines|official policy]]'''. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 01:27, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:JYolkowski|JYolkowski]] // [[User talk:JYolkowski|talk]] 00:46, 16 May 2005 (UTC) See comment above for my reason. |
|||
#[[User:Ctachme|Ctachme]] 01:13, 16 May 2005 (UTC) -- see my above comment |
|||
# <small>[[User:Trödel|Trödel]]|<font color="C000C0">[[User_talk:Trödel|talk]]</font></small> no comment 01:15, 16 May 2005 |
|||
# [[User:Grenavitar|gren]] 01:29, 16 May 2005 (UTC) - It's just trying to secularize something of Christian origins. Cloaking the matter doesn't change it. I think we should be able to take a serious look at history and realize how ideas were formed and the bias with which they were formed and deal with it since they are in common usage. |
|||
# {{User:Rdsmith4/Sig}} 01:58, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Onco p53|Onco p53]] 02:00, 16 May 2005 (UTC) -- Very little gain, will confuse many people. |
|||
# Slrubenstein wants to push BCE/CE. Instead, the choice between the two systems should be a Wikipedia preference similar to the preferences already operating for other aspects of date format. As with UK/US spelling, new articles should (consistently) use whichever system the first editor prefers, and edit warring between systems should be specifically banned. — [[User:Chameleon|''Chameleon'']] 02:17, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Acjelen|Acjelen]] 02:26, 16 May 2005 (UTC) - The idea that the 1st century represents the beginning of a common era is untenable. BCE and CE bring Jesus to mind more than anything else they do. |
|||
#:*If you have ideas about a better solution (an alternate proposal) feel free to use this article's talk page. [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 02:43, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*I have no alternatives of my own, but I would endorse a policy similar to one suggested by [[User:Chameleon|Chameleon]] above. In our secular world we are stuck with a year system started by a Christian to account (incorrectly perhaps) for the birth of a man particularily important to Christianity. We might as well keep the BC/AD labels as a reminder of Western religious and political hegemony in particular and of the passing religionary world in general. The only real alternative to the BC/AD system is a unitary year-counting system that covers the entire 10,000 years or so of human history. -[[User:Acjelen|Acjelen]] 03:33, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Eclecticology|Eclecticology]] 02:30, 2005 May 16 (UTC) Let people use what they want instead of pushing for political correctness. |
|||
#:*I tried to address this here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Why_Are_People_Offended_by_the_Claim_of_Unconscious_Bias.3F], can you explain why the argument does not pursuade you? Do you think our NPOV policy is "political correctness?" [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:17, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 02:37, May 16, 2005 (UTC) With all respect for [[User:Slrubenstein]], I just don't think this is the right course of action. |
|||
# [[User:Dragons flight|Dragons flight]] 03:04, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Evil Monkey|Evil Monkey]]∴[[User talk:Evil Monkey|Hello]] 03:20, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Pollinator]], It is pointless, and, in fact, deceptive, to substitute common era, when nothing is changed except political correctness. |
|||
#:*Well, I try to address the PC issue here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Why_Are_People_Offended_by_the_Claim_of_Unconscious_Bias.3F] — can you explain to me why what I wrote is wrong? Also, I don't understand why you think nothing is changed. How do you respond to this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_4:_Unnecessary:_BCE.2FCE_means_the_same_thing_as_BC.2FAD]? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:39, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*This issue concerns [[WP:NPOV|NPOV policy]], which is '''official policy'''. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Delirium|Delirium]] 03:25, May 16, 2005 (UTC) I'm not religious, and still think this is silly. I don't object to CE/BCE per se, but I think mandating it is not a good idea, and rarely use it myself. Hell, Japan mostly uses "BC/AD" when they use western dates, despite Christianity being a minority religion in the country. |
|||
#:*Considering that the United States appears to be controlled by the Christian right and Israel lobbyists, I'm not surprised by such usage in Japan; although, I'd like to see some evidence to support your claim. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Canar|Canar]] 03:26, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Angela|Angela]]. I don't see this as a neutrality issue. Let people use either, preferably with an option for viewing your prefered version, as is done with [[m:Help:Preferences#Date format|date formats]]. |
|||
#:*That's an interesting and plausible suggestion; however, I don't see your vote here as appropriately positioned. Your vote belongs in a new category. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Well, can you respond specifically to this explanation [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Critics_of_BC.2FAD]? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:35, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Geogre|Geogre]] 03:30, 16 May 2005 (UTC) Inasmuch as BCE/CE incorporate the same dates as BC/AD, this is a distinction without difference. Therefore, the use of the distinction is not for difference, but for another reason. As the proposal has announced, this distinction exists for ideological reasons. Therefore, it is improper for Wikipedia to have a policy one way or the other. Uniformity across articles is impossible and of low yield. I should hope only for consistency within articles. |
|||
#:*I do not understand your reason. I try to address the PC issue here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Why_Are_People_Offended_by_the_Claim_of_Unconscious_Bias.3F] — can you explain to me why what I wrote is wrong? Also, I don't understand why you think nothing is changed. How do you respond to this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_4:_Unnecessary:_BCE.2FCE_means_the_same_thing_as_BC.2FAD]? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:39, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*I am trying not to get into the debate, here. However, I will explain my reasoning. The distinction between the two systems is not substantive, as the dates are the same, but rather a question of whether they do or do not encode a religious world view. If the writers are not ''consciously'' encoding religion, then this would be over. However, the argument is generally that such a message is ''received'' by the reader, no matter the intention. That perception is beyond our control. Status quo never needs a rationale. Change requires a rationale. So, if we need to change to avoid the perception of religious values, then I think we would be mandating, across the project, that all users must make a change because a supposed reader might take things the wrong way. The problem is that this states that there ''is'' a wrong way, as well as a right way, on a matter of ideology. We should not be in that position. As with meters and kilograms, British/American orthography, we can hope only that an article is consistent in its usage. [[User:Geogre|Geogre]] 04:27, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:::*There is a "right" and "wrong" way. (I use those terms loosely since my philosophy is without consideration of "right" and "wrong" divisions.) The "right" way adheres to [[WP:NPOV|NPOV policy]]. The "wrong" way supports a POV. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:42, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Geogre, with all respect, you did vote, so even if you don't want to get into a debate, discussing reasons is fair. And I ''genuinely'', ''sincerely'' believe you are fundamentally misunderstanding our NPOV policy. I address this here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Is_Meaning_Only_What_is_Intended.3F] where I ''quote'' the NPOV policy which makes it very clear that perception ''is'' what is important, and conscious intention is ''not'' relevant. It just isn't! Read the policy for yourself! (please.) [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:16, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:RJII|RJII]] 03:32, 16 May 2005 (UTC) Ridiculous. Has nothing to do with POV. [[User:RJII|RJII]] 03:32, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Care to back that up with something like, well, you know, "reasons?" The proposal provides a variety of arguments — can't you respond to ''any'' of them? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 03:34, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Mark|Mark]] 03:36, 16 May 2005 (UTC) - What a joke. People are always trying to twist the NPOV policy in their direction. |
|||
#:*We are not twisting the NPOV policy; instead, we are using it and proposing policy to further aid its enforcement. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 03:45, 16 May 2005 (UTC) It has nothing to do with [[neutral point of view]] |
|||
#:*Then how do you respond to this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Critics_of_BC.2FAD]? |
|||
#:*BCE/CE are value-neutral abbreviations for "Before Common Era" and "Common Era" whereas BC/AD are [[religiocentrism|religiocentric]] abbreviations for "Before Christ" and "Anno Domini" ("The Year of Our Lord") which factually implies that a) Christ exists and b) that Christ is "our" Lord. The suggestion that we maintain such a point-of-view on an aspiring academically credible encyclopedia is patently ridiculous. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Certainly articles on Islam, Judaism, etc. should avoid BC/AD, but otherwise I think they are fine: simply more common. Many people do not even recognize and understand BCE/CE. -- [[User:Jmabel|Jmabel]] | [[User talk:Jmabel|Talk]] 04:18, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*I don't favor hand-holding readers or dumbing down content for the ignorant. If a reader of Wikipedia does not understand something, they should research what they don't understand rather than opposing inquiry. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*Jmabel, I really think the opposite view makes more sense: in ''any'' and ''all'' places that express or describe a Christian point of view, "BC" and "AD" '''must''' be used. But everywhere else, doesn't NPOV require us not to use them? Also, with all due respect, as concerns your observation that BC and AD are more common, could you comment on this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_2:_Popularity]. Also, you are right that many people are unfamiliar with BCE and CE — but isn't it the job of an [[Encyclopedia]] to expose people to new things, and educate them (read the first paragraph of the [[Encyclopedia]] article)? |
|||
#Since I read BCE/CE as "Before Christian Era/Christian Era", I don't see why BC/AD should be disallowed. --[[User:Carnildo|Carnildo]] 04:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*...because your interpretation of BCE/CE is incorrect? [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:38, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*Carnildo, with all due respect, would you reread this section and comment [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_4:_Unnecessary:_BCE.2FCE_means_the_same_thing_as_BC.2FAD]? |
|||
# [[User:Rangek|Rangek]] 04:23, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
#Sorry, it just isn't that POV. It may be POV, but it isn't POV _enough_... merely using BCE doesn't make Christs' birth not the pivot. NPOV would be BP dating, and that's just silly.[[User:Rboatright|Rick Boatright]] 04:36, 16 May 2005 (UTC)\ |
|||
#:*I honestly mean no offense, but I think you should read the [[Wikipedia:Neutral point of view]] policy carefully. In the proposal, I provided quotes to prove that BC and AD violate our NPOV policy. Why do those quotes not convince you? |
|||
# [[User:SimonP|SimonP]] 04:38, May 16, 2005 (UTC) Excessive regulation is a bad thing. Leave writers free to use whichever form their comfortable with, as we do with different types of English. If this is a major problem for some people the best solution would be to ask the developers to expand the date format preferences. |
|||
# [[User:Gtrmp|Sean Curtin]] 04:34, May 16, 2005 (UTC) There shouldn't be a policy mandating one or the other; some users will simply not have any idea what BCE/CE means, but others will take umbrage at the use of BC/AD. No way to please everyone without using both. -[[User:Gtrmp|Sean Curtin]] 04:34, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*As I said previously, I don't favor hand-holding readers or dumbing down content for the ignorant. If a reader of Wikipedia does not understand something, they should research what they don't understand rather than opposing inquiry. The argument that "people won't understand" is unsupportable on Wikipedia. Why? Hyperlinks. [[User:Adraeus|Adraeus]] 04:52, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:The Bob Talbot|The Bob Talbot]] 04:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# Oppose, as most of the English speaking world use BC/AD. In my own view, BCE and CE were developed to deal with Christianity and try to remove Christian influence from the world. However, this is not the reason I vote oppose here. I think we should be using the most well-known dating term, and BC and AD ''are'' the best known of the terms. - [[User:Ta bu shi da yu|Ta bu shi da yu]] 04:55, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Could you humor me and respond to this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_2:_Popularity], specifically? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:37, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
# [[User:Darrien|Darrien]] 05:08, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
#:<strike> I'm Chinese, and agnostic. I am not Christian, I have never been Christian, and I do not plan to convert to Christianity. I have always consistently used BC / AD. The etymologies of BC / AD are about relevant to me as that of Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. People in China and Japan don't have that much contact with Christianity; hence they don't tend to care about this sort of thing, similar to how English-speakers generally don't find it strange to be referring to Thor's-day, Woden's-day, etc. I suspect that it's only in places where Christianity / non-Christianity come into direct conflict (e.g. Christianity vs Islam, Christianity vs Judaism, Christianity vs atheism) that people get sensitive about this otherwise well-established convention. -- [[User:Ran|ran]] ([[User talk:Ran|talk]]) 05:30, May 16, 2005 (UTC)</strike> |
|||
#::*Ran, with all due respect, it sounds like you are saying you oppose the proposal ''because AD/BC doesn't bother you'' (or even, most people). Okay, you and they have a right not to be bothered by AD/BC. But, again with all due respect, don't you think that the basis of our NPOV policy is that ''not everyone feels the same way''. This ''necessarily'' means that it ''doesn't matter'' that you are not bothered by something; what matters is that ''someone else'' '''is'''. I think this is the very essence of NPOV, to recognize that one's own feelings are not shared by others and thus cannot be the basis for making decisions concerning NPOV! I assume you have read our [[Wikipedia:Neutral point of view]] policy, and my proposal and the quotes I provide from our NPOV policy — how do you think I have misinterpreted our NPOV policy? [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:37, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:::*You're right... just because I see it as frivolous doesn't mean that everyone else also does. After having had the distinctly difficult experience of trying to convince people to use "[[Mainland China]]" rather than "[[China]]" or "the [[People's Republic of China]]" (people said that it was frivolous PC crap, but it sure is infinitely more NPOV), I really should know better. Good luck in your proposal. ;) -- [[User:Ran|ran]] ([[User talk:Ran|talk]]) 07:16, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#I don't think the use of established linguistic conventions represents a "view" that is subject to NPOV. An article ''about'' the conventions themselves should report the arguments for and against their usage, and NPOV would be concerned with such a presentation. But NPOV is not concerned with what the content of the ''language'' is, something Wikipedia shouldn't try to remake no matter how well-intentioned—we should only use it as we find it. I'm an atheist, btw. [[User:Postdlf|Postdlf]] 05:48, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:* As you surely must know, I agree that "An article ''about'' the conventions themselves should report the arguments for and against their usage, and NPOV would be concerned with such a presentation" since I state this in the proposal. But I do not understand your reason for voting no. I explicitly address your concern here: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/BCE-CE_Debate#Argument_4:_Unnecessary:_BCE.2FCE_means_the_same_thing_as_BC.2FAD] and wonder why you do not find it convincing. Also, haven't you read the [[Wikipedia:Neutral point of view]] policy? I can't find where in the policy anything supports your view. You read the quotes from the policy I provide in the article in support of the proposal — do you disagree with my interpretation/use of these quotes from the NPOV policy? How? I'd like to know, [[User:Slrubenstein|Slrubenstein]] | [[User talk:Slrubenstein|Talk ]] 05:57, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:**Because I see the issue as a much narrower one than you do. Linguistic conventions are simply beyond the scope of concern of [[WP:NPOV]] because it doesn't address them. It's entirely framed around the problem of POV article ''content''—the NPOV presentation of facts. The only part of it that even addresses word usage is to advocate for the proper use of terms that may have a perjorative meaning if ''misused'' (i.e., imply negative ''facts'' about the subject to which they are appended). Linguistic conventions, on the other hand, fall under ''style'' guidelines, and the offense of some at the form the language has taken is not enough reason for us to impose a contrary convention based on how we would like the language to be. Obviously if something is a ''convention'' the vast majority of speakers of that language do not find its usage offensive, and until those who do find AD/BC offensive manage to '''change the language''' (as happened with "man" as a synonym for "humanity"), then their preference should not be followed any more than the preference of those who want to change [[women]] to [[womyn]]. [[User:Postdlf|Postdlf]] 07:29, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:***This is an excellent articulation of my own viewpoint as well, in case I have been less than clear elsewhere. [[User:Alanyst|Alanyst]] 07:39, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Stbalbach|Stbalbach]] 06:26, 16 May 2005 (UTC). Two points. First, what would be next, require everything be in '''metric''' to cut-out the English POV on weights and measurements? Second, Judeo-Christian elements are so ingrained, you cant remove it without a cultural labotamy, BC is part of a mountain of historiographical baggage that has ingrained Christian, and anti-Christian, pejorative and otherwise meanings and connotations. Dark Ages, Renaissance, Feudalism, Middle Ages, Byzantium -- these are all anti-christian terms (read: POV) created by secular humanists to express disfavour with one system and favour of another, these are not neutral descriptors of history, but we use them. |
|||
#[[User:Proteus|Proteus]] [[User_talk:Proteus|(Talk)]] 07:23, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Mildly, for reasons explained in "General Discussion." (If I didn't think BCE/CE would be an obstacle to readers' understanding, I would switch my vote.) The best solution might be to make date/epoch markers a matter of user preference, but that could be technically tricky. [[User:Alanyst|Alanyst]] 07:36, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#This extension of policy is unnecessary. [[User:Demi|Demi]] <sup>[[User_talk:Demi|T]]</sup>/<sub>[[Special:Contributions/Demi|C]]</sub> 08:16, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
#No matter what we call it, it's still the same event that's the reference point. By renaming it to some political correct term, like "Common Era", we in fact is even more gross, in that we then implicit says that the birth of one specific religious figure is something everyone, no matter religion should accept as a common reference point. By sticking with BC and AD, we at least acknowledge that it is based in one specific religion. In short, BCE/CE is just cultural imperialism thinly disguised as political correctness. -- [[User:Wegge|Wegge]] 08:42, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*If BC/AD merely translated to "Before Jesus" and "In the year of Jesus", it wouldn't be a problem, since the reference point would just be to a historical figure (which is the context of BCE/CE). The problem is that the acronyms do more than refer to a historical figure, they make certain POV statements about that figure: BC asserts this figure is a messiah, and AD asserts he is a god, assertions with which not all people agree. --[[User:MPerel|<font color="#330000">M</font><font color="#334400">P</font><font color="#338800">er</font><font color="#33cc00">el </font>]]<sup><small>( [[user_talk:MPerel|<font color="#11bb00">talk</font>]] | [[Special:contributions/MPerel|<font color="3399FF">contrib</font>]])</small></sup> 08:57, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#::*More than ''a'' messiah, it asserts that Jesus is ''the'' messiah, and by extension, that anyone (''see [[Jew]]s'') who do not accept him as such are in eggregious error. Not ''a'' god, since [[Christianity]] claims to be [[monotheism|monotheistic]], but ''the'' God. This truly is then, in the Christian worldview, the 2005th (give or take) year since "God became [a man] and walked among us". This is what the abbreviations ''mean''. That said, I don't think most wikipedians mean this when they use them, nor do I think most readers realize that when they read it. B/CE is more disruptive. I would prefer the speedy adoption of CSS w/ reader preferences to overcome this. See the talk page for an ongoing discussion of this. [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 10:36, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#As a non-native speaker of English, and a non-Christian, I really prefer AD/BC. Unlike many non-native speakers, I do understand CE/BCE if it's used in an article, but it does have me stop reading, to interpret it. Besides, the CE-notation is hopelessly POV. The etymology of AD shows its Christian roots, just like AH is based on islam; but "Common Era" smells of superiority: "common" meaning "everyone uses it". [[User:Eugene van der Pijll|Eugene van der Pijll]] 08:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Both sets of era names are fine, and the current compromise is good enough.[[User:Gdr|Gdr]] 09:48, 2005 May 16 (UTC) |
|||
#*You apparently fail to realize that there ''is'' no "current compromise"... [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 10:09, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#what next? Using Julian dates, or the Unix era, instead of the horribly biased Christian count? "What year are we?" – "2005." – "shame on you, imperialistic chauvinistic christian scum!". Please. [[User:Dbachmann|dab]] <small>[[User_talk:Dbachmann|('''ᛏ''')]]</small> 10:34, 16 May 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Wiglaf|Wiglaf]] 10:50, 16 May 2005 (UTC). Aren't there more important matters to vote on? Even if we would change the letters, we would still be counting the Christian way, which is completely neutral for most people. Why not remove the English names of the week because they are ''[[Asatrú]]'', as well?. |
|||
#[[User:Zoney|'''zoney''']] <font size=+1 style="color:green;">♣</font> [[User talk:Zoney|'''talk''']] 11:26, 16 May 2005 (UTC) Seeking to change the status quo is merely a non-neutral wish to remove traces of Christian influence. Should we rename the days of the week too? This is pure PC nonsense at best, and anti-Christian at worst. |
|||
#*I happen to think Christianity is a morass of insane nonsense, yet I voted against. Are you saying I, as an anti-Christian, should change my vote? [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 11:50, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#:*Clarification: I'm simply saying that I don't think it's worthwhile bringing allegations of religious bias into the discussion. (And yes, I understand how ridiculous this might sound to someone who hasn't followed my arguments all along, but it's not my job to hold your hand...) [[User:TShilo12|Tomer]] <sup><font color=129DBC>[[User talk:TShilo12|TALK]]</font></sup> 11:51, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#Lunacy. [[User:Noisy|Noisy]] | [[User talk:Noisy|Talk]] 11:32, May 16, 2005 (UTC) |
|||
#[[User:Geni|Geni]] 11:39, 16 May 2005 (UTC) it would appear that from quick searches of Pakistani and Isreali google that BC is more common than BCE in these countries (the same is true for saudi arabia). |
|||
#[[User:Wilfried Derksen|Electionworld]] 11:54, 16 May 2005 (UTC). It is more normal in English to use BC than BCE. |
Latest revision as of 18:55, 31 December 2024
![]() | This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Neutral point of view. 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 main page. |
- The move to close section was moved to the talk page.
![]() | This is a failed proposal. Consensus for its implementation was not established within a reasonable period of time. If you want to revive discussion, please use the talk page or initiate a thread at the village pump. |
I want Wikipedia to accept a general policy that BC ("Before Christ") and AD ("Anno Domini", "In the year of the Lord") represent a Christian Point of View and should be used only when they are appropriate, that is, in the context of expressing or providing an account of a Christian point of view. In other contexts, I argue that they violate our NPOV policy and we should use BCE (Before the Common Era) and CE (Common Era) instead. Slrubenstein | Talk 22:13, 15 May 2005 (UTC)
- This is my proposal. If you do not agree with it, please feel free to express your criticisms in the discussion sections, and to vote no. However, please do not edit the content of this proposal. If you have your own proposal to make, feel free to make your own proposal. Finally, if anyone I quote in the proposal feels I have misrepresented them, please let me know and explain how, so I can revise it.
- If people think they can rephrase what I have written to make it more eloquent, by all means do so.
- But PLEASE put any comments in one of the appropriate discussion sections, following the proposal, below
ANNOUNCEMENT: My primary purpose in presenting this proposal was not to take a poll, but to provoke discussion. Although there have been many comments (a few, especially among the “opposed” votes, quite thoughtful), I do not think there has really been much discussion, much dialogue. Many people state their views, without discussing them with people who have different views. One small example: although I and a few others have written comments and questions to people voting “no,” few if any of the people who oppose the proposal have asked questions of any of the sixty or so people who have voted “yes.” Moreover, it is a shame that most critics of the proposal direct their opposition to me, when so many other people support the proposal. Wikipedia is a community, a community needs to communicate, and the ideal form of communication is an open-minded discussion among people of opposing views.
I know that I am a polarizing figure for many people. Therefore, I will step out of this discussion for several days (Aside from maintenance chores). I hope that when I am gone, people on both sides of the issue will talk more to one another, asking questions and responding in ways that invite more discussion. Adios.Slrubenstein | Talk 15:12, 17 May 2005 (UTC)
Please place comments on the announcment/s at the bottom of the page, bellow the vote. Please make sure these adhere to Wikipedia:No Personal Attacks policy. For comments on the policy, see the Discussion sections bellow. Thanks. El_C 20:28, 17 May 2005 (UTC)
Origins of the Debate
There has, on the Talk:Jesus page, been a rather contentious debate. This debate is primarily between
- those who claim that BC/AD are NPOV and BCE/CE are POV, and
- those who believe that BC/AD are POV and BCE/CE are POV.
- those who believe that it has nothing to do with NPOV
However, the discussion on the Talk:Jesus page has raised two other questions:
- if one uses the Gregorian calendar, must one use BC/AD?
- don’t BC/AD and BCE/CE just mean the same thing?
I will try to sort out my answers to these questions systematically. It is going to take a long time, but given the lengthy and vitriolic debate on the Talk:Jesus page, I want to be sure to address every important concern. I will refer to some users by name because they have been involved in the debate and have taken the time to articulate arguments against my position; I want to make it clear that I am responding to real and not hypothetical arguments.
Critics of BC/AD
Those who criticize BC/AD do so for one simple reason.
- BC and AD represent a Christian point of view
Accordingly, they violate our Wikipedia:Neutral point of view policy (which, Jimbo has said, is non-negotiable):
- We sometimes give an alternative formulation of the non-bias policy: assert facts, including facts about opinions — but don't assert opinions themselves. There is a difference between facts and values, or opinions. By "fact," we mean "a piece of information about which there is no serious dispute." In this sense, that a survey produced a certain published result is a fact. That Mars is a planet is a fact. That Socrates was a philosopher is a fact. No one seriously disputes any of these things. So we can feel free to assert as many of them as we can.
- By value or opinion, on the other hand, we mean "a piece of information about which there is some dispute."
That BC/AD represents a Christian point of view, this is simply undeniable. BC stands for “before Christ,” with the presumption that Jesus is Christ. AD stands for Anno Domini, in the year of our Lord, with the presumption that Jesus is Lord. This is fact.
Defense of BC/AD, and Responses
Those who defend BC/AD claim it is NPOV for one or more of four reasons:
- Wikipedia’s Style Guide states that BC/AD and BCE/CE are equally acceptable.
- most people use it
- its meaning has changed over the centuries
- people who claim it is offensive are disingenuous
- It's also indicative of who won history's wars, whether or not nobly. History is not a tool to be changed at a whim.
Argument 1: Style
As to the first argument, that BC/AD is permitted by our Manual of Style: this was introduced by Rangerdude, who said, "As you have been shown many times, Wikipedia's NPOV policy says absolutely nothing barring the use of BC/AD and Wikipedia's Style Manual explicitly condones it as one of two acceptable dating systems." Fine: the style manual explicitly allows both BC/AD and BCE/CE. This only means that the style manual will not help us resolve this debate. Rangerdude thinks he is saying that AD is permissible, but he is simultaneously saying that CE is permissible as well! This is no argument, since, on style grounds, at least, the policy is agnostic, or neutral. In fact, this manual is irrelevant to this issue, since as a matter of style it sees both systems as acceptable.
More importantly, those of us who reject BC/AD are not doing so on the grounds that it violates our style manual (which is not a “policy”), but rather on the grounds that it violates our NPOV policy. These are simply two different issues. Moreover, NPOV trumps style. According to the Wikipedia: Manual of Style
- Clear, informative and unbiased writing is always more important than presentation and formatting. Writers are not required to follow all or any of these rules.
According to Wikipedia: Neutral point of view, however,
- NPOV is "absolute and non-negotiable."
In short, the argument on the basis of style must be rejected out of hand.
Argument 2: Popularity
As to the second argument, that most people use and are familiar with BC/AD: This is an argument made by Jguk, who wrote "It is NPOV because we use it merely because it is the most common formulation" and later wrote “NPOV means that, for reporting purposes, we accept the societal norms that we are in. We use the most common terms as understood and used by our audience,” and by Silversmith who provided a long list of books that use BC/AD.
But more importantly, how wide-spread a practice is simply has nothing to do with NPOV. If this is Jguk’s and Silversmith’s interpretation of our NPOV policy, they are wrong. Quantity and popularity have nothing to do with neutrality. This is clearly stated in our Wikipedia: Neutral point of view policy:
- First, and most importantly, consider what it means to say that unbiased writing presents conflicting views without asserting them. Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views
- That many books use a POV term does not make that POV term NPOV. NPOV is not a popularity contest. It should surprise no one that a google search shows that the vast majority of people use AD/BC, since the vast majority of sites on the web are from Christian or Christianized societies. We know most Westerners use BC and AD, but they do not do so because it is “neutral.” They do so because the West is largely a Christian culture, by which I mean that many practices that have their origin in Christianity are taken for granted, regardless of what people believe (this is one meaning of "culture," a historically and locally specific set of habits). The only thing that Silversmith’s list of books, or the number of Goggle hists, is evidence of is that many people have this POV; but it is still a POV and not NPOV. Most people in the antebellum South (and probably the North too) thought Blacks were inferior. That most people thought this doesn't mean that it is an objective fact, indeed it is still a point of view, a highly biased one. So the number of books that use BC/AD, and the number of Google hits for BC/AD, are irrelevant. They do not count as evidence in a discussion of NPOV. This argument must be dismissed out of hand.
Argument 3: Change in Meaning
As to the third argument, that its meaning has changed over time. This is a position taken by Alanyst, Jguk, and Trodel. I happen to have serious doubts about this; Jguk and Trodel have said other things that lead me to question either their honesty or at least their consistency. However, I will first take them seriously before explaining why I think they are inconsistent.
- Your marginal toning down to "inconsistent" (while still calling them dishonest and insincere), here and several other places, is too little, too late. You had already set the tone for discussion in your original proposal, by your original wording. Do the right thing and call off the vote and abandon your proposal now. Gene Nygaard 15:22, 17 May 2005 (UTC)
This argument actually hinges on, or takes the form of, two arguments. One is really just a version of the “it’s neutral because it is popular.” This was argued by Alanyst, who wrote “It's so widely used that it no longer identifies the religious POV of the author who uses it. Hence its usage is NPOV, even if its historical meaning is not.” I have already explained why the “widely used” argument is irrelevant. But Alanyst is also suggesting that many people today do not know what BC and AD stand for. This is the argument of Trodel, who points out that in his office, “Most knew it was latin (or roman) had something to do with Jesus but had no clue as to what it meant.” Alanyst provides as an example “Thursday,” which is named after the Norse god Thor. As Alanyst correctly points out, no one thinks that “Thursday” has any religious meaning anymore; no one believes it is pushing a POV; no one is offended by it.
Is Meaning Only What is Intended?
There are really two different questions. The first one is, is POV a matter of intent? Must the author or speaker intend to communicate this point of view? Alanyst and others have insisted that although they use BC and AD, they are either not Christians or are not doing this to impose a Christian POV. But our NPOV policy is not about the author’s intentions. It does not say that an author cannot present his or her own point of view as if it were fact. That may be the most egregious and common violation of NPOV, but really, that is just an example. NPOV is not about specifically "the author's" point of view. It is a policy against presenting any point of view as fact. I could write an article in which I present the Nazi point of view as fact. Or, if this is too extreme, the point of view of vegetarians as fact. It doesn't matter that I am neither a Nazi nor a vegetarian, I would still be violating the NPOV policy. This is not about the author's point of view. It is about privileging any point of view!
Another way of looking at this is, must the POV be conscious. Again, our Wikipedia: Neutral point of view policy makes it clear that this is not the case.
- Bias need not be conscious. For example, beginners in a field often fail to realize that what sounds like common sense is actually biased in favor of one particular view. (So we not infrequently need an expert in order to render the article entirely unbiased.) To take another example, writers can, without intent, propagate "geographical" bias, by for example describing a dispute as it is conducted in one country without knowing that the dispute is framed differently elsewhere.
Now, I do not claim that the unconscious bias here is strictly geographical in the sense given in the example above. But you can think of it as a geographic bias in the sense of a “Western” bias. You can also think of it as an unconscious religious bias. At the very least, it is an unconscious cultural bias.
This raises two questions: first, if it is unconscious, how do we know there is a bias? Second, where does this unconscious bias come from?
How Does One Know if There is an Unconscious Bias?
The reason we know that there is a bias, even though many people are unconscious of it — indeed, the only way we can know there is a bias when many people are unconscious of it – is when other people are conscious of it. So let’s see if other people perceive a bias:
See [1] for this:
- [1] B.C. stands for "before Christ" and AD, stands for "Anno Domini": "in the year of the Lord." Both are references to Jesus. Because Jews do not believe in the divinity of Jesus, they use the abbreviations BCE, for "Before the Common Era" (that is, before the year 1), and CE, for "Common Era" (that is, after the year 1).
See [2] for this:
- When religious Jews refer to the Christian calendar, they write the date as such, 1999 CE, which stands for the Common Era. Similarly, BCE stands for "before the Common Era." This way of indicating that one is using the common calendar differentiates the dates from BC which is "before Christ," and AC which is "after Christ"or AD, "Anno Domini."
See [3] for this:
- Q. Why do Jews use BCE and CE rather than BC and AD?
- A. The BC (Before Christ) and AD (Anno Domini, Year of our Lord) method of dating is clearly a Christian system. Jews, not recognizing Jesus as Messiah but cogniscent of the need to have a dating method that is in synch with the rest of the world's identify the period we call AD as the "Common Era" (CE), and the period before as "Before the Common Era" (BCE).
See [4] for
- Jews also do not use Christian terms when referring to the Western Calendar. The Western, or Christian, Calendar has B.C. or AD after a year in some cases. Since the Christian Calendar is centered on the birth of Jesus, Christianity's central figure, BC means "Before Christ" and AD means Anno Domini, which is Latin for "In the year of our Lord." Jewish people, on the other hand, uses the terms CE (Common Era) and BCE ( Before the Common Era). The Common Era is, of course, the time at which Jews and Christians began to have a shared history.
See [5] for:
- BCE, “Before the Common Era,” is a theologically neutral equivalent to BC, “Before Christ;” just as CE, “Common Era,” is a neutral equivalent to A.D. (anno domini), “the year of our Lord.”
See [6] for
- WHY BCE AND CE?
- Most Jewish historical and religious books use the designations BCE (Before the Common Era) and CE (Common Era) to indicate respectively the period before the birth of Jesus and the period after his birth. The explanation is simple. The authors do not wish to imply that they accept Jesus as the Christ and therefore dislike the designation BC (Before Christ); they do not wish to imply that they accept Jesus as Lord and therefore dislike the designation AD (Anno Domini - in the year of the Lord). The traditional Jewish calendar is often inadequate. Therefore the conventional calendar is accepted for practical purposes, with the designations BCE and CE
See [7] for
- Q. In an earlier version of this issue, you used the abbreviations CE and BCE What do they mean?
- A. CE stands for the "common era" that Judaism and Christianity share. BCE means "before the common era." Jews adopted the terms as alternatives to the widely used terms BC (before Christ) and AD (Anno Domini, or Year of the Lord), which both assume that Christ's birth is the central event of history. Since this publication is directed to Catholics, BC and AD are preferred.
See [8] for
- The term BC stands for "Before Christ" and AD stands for Anno Domini, Latin for the "Year of Our Lord". Because non-Christians do not consider Jesus to be their "Lord", scholars developed the non-religious term "the Common Era", abbreviated CE. BCE stands for "Before the Common Era."
I think these passages reveal three important things: first, there is no problem using BC and AD when addressing a Christian audience. Second, Jews are offended by BC and AD and use BCE and CE as a "non-denominational" way to use the Gregorian calendar. Third, many Christians respect this. I want to remind you that BCE/CE is used by Jews but is not a Jewish dating system. The Jewish "POV" is that this is the year 5765. Most Jews are offended by saying this is the year AD 2005. But most Jews are content with saying it is 2005 CE as a compromise. As one of the sources above explains, "The Common Era is, of course, the time at which Jews and Christians began to have a shared history."
Why are People Unconscious of Their Bias?
Now to the second question. If so many people really do perceive this bias, why is it that so many people are unconscious of the bias. I can only speculate, but I think my hypothesis makes sense.
Sociologists have studied relations of domination for a very long time, and have discovered that the dominant position is often "unmarked" -- for example, if Whites are talking about a White musician they will just say "x, the pianist" but many times if the musician is Black they will say "x the Black pianist." They may think that they do not hate Blacks, they may not think they are discriminating against Blacks, but it is nevertheless evidence of the inequality between Whites and Blacks. Slaveowners thought their slaves were happy; rich people think poor people could be rich if they just weren't so lazy. These are not strictly analogous to the case at hand, but that isn't why I bring these examples up. My point is that people who are in a privileged position seldom admit it and often do not even see it.
People who are not in a privileged position, however, are acutely sensitive to these power dynamics (which is why you hear a lot of Whites telling Blacks they are "too sensitive" or "have an attitude problem" but seldom the other way around). My point: the very claim that AD and BC are NPOV, which I do believe some people sincerely believe, is actually just more evidence of how POV they are. The worst kind of POV is the unacknowledged kind, because the effect of claiming that your POV is NPOV is either to compel everyone else to accept your POV unquestioningly, or to enable you to tell anyone who says "No, they are not neutral, and you are trying to impose your view of the world on me" that they are being ridiculous — in other words, to tell people you disagree with to shut up, or to enable you simply not to listen to them. Don't listen to all the people whom you offend, if it makes you happy. But don't kid yourself that these terms are NPOV, claiming so is just the newest scam to get people who are different from you to be like you. I can respect you, but don't think you can compel me to be like you
I want to be clear that I am not suggesting that a member of a minority or dominated group cannot make POV claims — they do so all the time. Nor am I claiming that a member of a majority group can never make NPOV claims — again, they do so all the time. The fact that there are Christian Whites who use BCE and CE is simple proof that they can make NPOV claims. The fact that a Christian contributing to this article might write "According to the New Testament, Jesus was resurrected ..." as opposed to the POV "Three days later, Jesus was resurrected" is another perfectly good example of a Christian making an NPOV claim.
I am claiming only two things: (1)that members of a dominant group often do not recognize that some things they say or do are not universally shared but rather reflect their particular point of view. Note my use of the word "often." "Often" does not mean "always." But I do believe this is a fact. (2) that members of minority or subordinate groups are usually in a position to perceive and recognize unconscious bias on the part of members of a majority or dominant group.
How is a member of a majority or dominant group to respond? Simple: listen, with an open mind, to people different from you, and understand that they may legitimately see something in your words or deeds that you do not see. This does not mean that any and all complaints by members of a minority or dominated group are true by any means. It only means that you concede that you may be wrong and they may be right.
How do you find out? Through a conversation, of course. And for a couple of days I and several other people, including non-Jews, have given reasons for our objections to BC/AD.
As to the question, why is it that BC/AD express an unconscious bias when "Thursday" does not? Because there aren't many worshipers of Thor these days, and because if worshipers of Thor went around the world converting people to Thor-worship or killing them, it was a very very long time ago. But it was not at all long ago that Christians killed non-Christians, and quite recently that Christians went around the world trying to convert non-Christians; indeed, it still happens today. You can't compare AD with Thursday because the contexts are so different.
Why Are People Offended by the Claim of Unconscious Bias?
Now, a number of people seem to be really offended by my hypothesis — Alanyst and ClemMcGann directly, and indirectly Jguk, who said “You are manufacturing "offence" where you know there is none,” Trodel, who wrote “this debate is a group purposefully feigning offense in order to make a change to convention for whatever reason,” and Sam Spade who thought my taking offense is “bizarre.” This leads us to the fourth claim, that people who take offense are being disingenuous..
This statement is itself offensive. You can ask all your friends, co-workers, and neighbors what AD means and they can all say "I dunno." All that means is that you do not happen to know people who do. You can ask all your friends, co-workers, and neighbors whether they care what AD means and they can all say "not me." All that means is that you do not happen to know any people who care. But for you to leap from the fact that you don't know anyone who cares to the conclusion that those people who care are faking it is patronizing and insulting.
The real question is not "Are those who take offence at BC/AD faking it," the real question is, "Why does it offend some people so, when they learn that other people are offended by BC/AD?"
I think this is the real question because some people, like Jguk, simultaneously insist that BC and AD are just letters, so why should anyone care — and yet, when someone proposes other letters, BCE and CE, which are also “just letters,” he flips out. Either BC/AD are arbitrary, or they actually stand for something. If you believe they are arbitrary, then it should not matter to you at all what letters we use, and BCE and CE should be equally acceptable. But some keep arguing! Why do they care, if they are just letters? Obviously, they care very much. Obviously, they care that some people do not want to use BC and AD. Obviously, making other people use AD and BC is important to them. Obviously, AD and BC are not just arbitrary letters, obviously they do represent something.
Critics argue that they represent “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” (in the year of our Lord), and above I pointed out that even if many do not know what they stand for, other do, and recognize their POV. This should not surprise anyone — I am sure that almost every editor at Wikipedia has written something that violated NPOV policy, and they didn't know why, and needed someone to tell them. As I said, I think Jguk and Trodel are inconsistent when they claim that they are not using these terms to express a Christian point of view. In a moment, I will explain why. But since many people may sincerely not believe they are expressing a Christian POV, I want to explain why I think BCE/CE nevertheless upsets them.
Indeed, given how offended people such as Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel get, I must consider that something else is going on — that BC and AD represent something other than “Before Christ” and “Anno Domini” that really, really do matter to Alanyst, Clem McGann, Jguk, and Trodel (by the way, I recognize I may be being unfair to Alanyst. I sometimes think this view I am about to present does not apply to him). What do these letters represent? Simply put: the supremacy of their point of view, and the comfort that comes from believing that the rest of the world thinks like them. Maybe it just has something to do with the fact that some people are scared by the fact that they may have an unconscious bias. But I suspect that some people simply feel threatened by difference. I suspect that when a group of people are used to dominating the world — and to be clear, it need not be political and economic domination, it can be cultural domination, it can be the assumption that whatever you take for granted, everyone else takes for granted as well – it deeply disturbs them to realize that they no longer dominate it.
Well, too bad. You have to accept the fact that not everyone in the world thinks like you. Not everyone in this world thinks like your friends, neighbors, and co-workers. You are claiming that "If you disagree with me, you are faking it" is pure and simple arrogance. There are people who know, and who care. They are not faking it. Please re-read the NPOV policy. You are acting as if the fact that your beliefs are common, no other view is legitimate. This is the opposite of our Wikipedia: Neutral point of view policy. That policy states,
- "First, and most importantly, consider what it means to say that unbiased writing presents conflicting views without asserting them. Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views; it does not assert that some sort of intermediate view among the different views is the correct one."
The very spirit of the NPOV policy is that no one view is supreme, and no one can take comfort in the belief that everyone shares their point of view.
As I explained above, the claim that if something is common it is NPOV is false and has nothing to do with our NPOV policy. It just doesn't matter how many people use BC/AD or not. You simply do not understand our Wikipedia: Neutral point of view. It states,
- First, and most importantly, consider what it means to say that unbiased writing presents conflicting views without asserting them. Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views; it does not assert that some sort of intermediate view among the different views is the correct one.
You can argue all you want. But it is a fact that BC stands for "before Christ" and that represents a point of view. As such it violates our NPOV policy. You can scream at the top of your voice that many people do not know what the letters mean, so it doesn't matter. But it is a fact that many people do know what these letters mean, and that is enough to raise NPOV issues. You are so intent in forcing me to accept your beliefs (even the belief that "Christ" is something everyone should take for granted and just use, pretending the word means nothing). You just can't stand the fact that I refuse to cave in to your pressure, your pressure that I take for granted what most White Anglo Saxon Protestants take for granted. Too bad. The very fact that I and many others will not bow to your will is itself proof that your beliefs are not universal, not natural. They are your beliefs, not mine, and stop acting like everyone thinks the way you do. This is the antithesis of our NPOV policy.
This is not a matter of being “politically correct” in the vulgar sense of the term. It is on the contrary an aspiration to live up to the best aspects of European civilization rather than its worst — to actively reject the legacy of the genocide of Native Americans by Europeans, the unbelievable inhumanity of the Belgian Congo, of the British occupation of India, Kenya, and other parts of the world, but to embrace the ideals of the American Declaration of Independence; of the French Rights of Man; of England's slow but steady decision to treat people equally before the law. There is nothing ridiculous about the principle that no one group's views should be imposed on another. I willingly accept the Gregorian calendar as a convenience, but do not force your beliefs that Jesus is Christ and Lord on me. That is unacceptable. Similarly, Wikipedia should be a place where no one group's views are foisted on another. This is what NPOV is all about.
Now, I have suggested that Jguk and Trodel are disingenuous, or at least inconsistent, when they claim that they use BC and AD without any Christian meaning. Out of one side of their mouths they insist that BC/AD are NPOV. Out of the other side of their mouths, Jguk says "It is a deliberate attempt to whitewash Christianity out of the picture," which makes it clear that BC/AD do express the Christian POV and are thus POV; and Trodel says that using BCE/CE tells the world that "there is a concerted effort to deny the importance of Jesus in history" which again makes it clear that BC/AD do express the Christian POV and are thus POV. Okay, at least now Jguk and Trodel admit that BC and AD are Christian terms representing a Christian view. But why does using BCE and CE "whitewash Christianity out of the picture?" Why does using BCE and CE "deny the importance of history?" The words "Common Era" do not in any way imply that Christianity does not exist. Indeed, if we use BCE and CE on this article, which very much explains events central to Christianity, I do not see how using these three little letters undoes the work of the whole article. Let us be brutally frank. The only think that the terms BCE and CE suggest concerning Christianity is this: not everyone believes that Jesus is Christ and Lord." Jguk and others have written ad nauseum about how I am so easy to offend, and take offense at everything (and anyone who knows my work here knows this is not true). But now I see that they are projecting. Look, it does not offend me that some people believe that Jesus is Christ and Lord. But it offends Jguk and Trodel that some people do not believe that Jesus is Christ and Lord. How hypersensitive can one get? You two must face facts: most human beings do not accept Jesus as Christ and Lord. You are welcome to your beliefs, but most people do not share them. If you find this offensive, too bad, you just are going to have to get used to it. As I have said before, the end point of Jguk and Trodel's logic is this: anyone who does not share their faith, or their beliefs, is offensive. And this, folks, is the most offensive thing of all. Like the term "Common Era," Wikipedia's NPOV policy is all about recognizing that people do not all think alike. It is almost terrifying, that Jguk and Trodel wish this weren't so.
Tomer has (or had, I am not sure whether he has changed his mind or not) similarly revealed the Christian bias among people who claim that BC and AD today havenothing to do with Christianity. He writes, “‘Common Era’ is just plain stupid. Common? To whom? It's just a circumlocution based in a desire to either obliterate any mention or note of jesus in the dating system used in christendom over the past millennium and a half, or to simply avoid having to say his name everytime you state a date.” But what does Tomer mean when he says "christendom?" Does he mean the world consisting only of all Christians? If so, he is wrong, because many non Christians agree by convention to call this year 2005. Or by "christendom" does he mean all people who use the Gregorian calendar? If this is what he means, he is really insulting me and violating NPOV. I am not a Christian and although I call this year 2005 it insults me, and it is inaccurate, to call me a member of Christendom. If he believes that "Christendom" — the rule of Christianity – should rule Wikipeida, he has no business here at all. How dare he exclude all non-Christians (or demand that non-Christians accept Christian practices)? What does "Common Era" mean? It means an an era common to many people of many faiths, including Christianity but yes believe it or not including non-Christians too, and refusing to privilege a Christian POV. Why would anyone think this is stupid?
BCE/CE as NPOV Alternatives
As an alternative to BC/AD, people offer BCE/CE, "Before the Common Era," and "Common Era." They do so mainly for three reasons:
- First, the BCE/CE system claims that the Gregorian calendar is common to many different groups. This is a fact.
- Second, it implies that many people do not accept Jesus as Christ or Lord. This too is a fact.
- Third, it does not reflect the POV of any faith. BCE and CE do not represent a Jewish point of view. They do not represent a Hindu point of view. They do not represent a Muslim point of view. All they say is that there is a calendar, originally devoloped by Christians, but which Jews, Muslims, and Hindus have accepted as a matter of convention, but not as a matter of faith. It is NPOV because it represents no view.
Criticisms of BCE/CE, and Responses
Those who criticize BCE/CE have four arguments, each of which are easily dispensed with.
- BCE/CE is some new, revisionist, “PC” system devised by elitist scholars.
- BCE/CE simply represent another point of view
- BCE/CE does not change the fact that we use the Gregorian calendar, which is just as POV.
- BCE/CE mean the same thing as BC/AD — they are just letters.
Argument 1: Revisionism
As to the first argument, that BCE/CE is revisionist, this was expressed by Baas who wrote "Keep BC/AD. Wikipedia is not a forum for revisionist history." But NPOV and POV have nothing to do with revisionist history. To state that many people do not believe that Jesus was Christ or our Lord is not revisionism; the NT itself observes that some people do not accept Jesus as Christ and Lord. Wikipedia should as well.
It is true that Peter Daniels (a Cornell and Chicago trained linguist), has written that "C.E." and "B.C.E." came into use in the last few decades, perhaps originally in Ancient Near Eastern studies, where (a) there are many Jewish scholars and (b) dating according to a Christian era is irrelevant. It is indeed a question of sensitivity.” Even if this were true, this provides no grounds for rejecting BCE/CE. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, and our aim to create an on-line encyclopedia of high-quality is our primary mission. The very fact that something was devised by, and is becoming increasingly common among, scholars is a reason to use it, not reject it.
However, I believe that “CE” has earlier antecedents in the term VE, or Vulgar Era, which was used first by Christians, and only later by Jews, as an alternative to AD. In a 1716 book by English Bishop John Prideaux, we find, “The vulgar era, by which we now compute the years from his incarnation.” In 1835, in his book Living Oracles, Alexander Campbell, wrote “The vulgar Era, or Anno Domini; the fourth year of Jesus Christ, the first of which was but eight days.”
The first Jewish use of this practice of which I know is from an inscription on a gravestone in a Jewish cemetery in Plymouth, England:
- "Here is buried his honour Judah ben his honour Joseph, a prince and honoured amongst philanthropists, who executed good deeds, died in his house in the City of Bath, Tuesday, and was buried here on Sunday, 19 Sivan in the year 5585. In memory of Lyon Joseph Esq (merchant of Falmouth, Cornwall). who died at Bath June AM 5585/VE 1825. Beloved and respected."
This inscription, like most, uses the Jewish calendar (5585), but ends by providing the common year (1825); presumably the “VE” means “Vulgar Era,” and presumably VE was used instead of AD in order to avoid the Christian implications.
In 1908, In its article on "Chronology", the Catholic Encyclopedia uses the sentence: "Foremost among these [dating eras] is that which is now adopted by all civilized peoples and known as the Christian, Vulgar, or Common Era, in the twentieth century of which we are now living." This 1908 example from the Catholic Encyclopedia is the first use of “Common Era” I can find, and I believe it was used synonymously with, or to replace “Vulgar Era.”
In short, Christians first use “Vulgar Era” as an alternative to AD. “Vulgar Era” is more inclusive than “in the year of our Lord” and Christians may have been acknowledging that many people use the Gregorian calendar without believing that Jesus is Lord. It is important to note that at that time, “vulgar” had no negative connotations. “Vulgar” comes from the Latin word vulgāaris (from vulgus, “the common people”), meant “of or belonging to the common people, everyday,” and I believe it was used by Christians in the 18th and 19th centuries to mean “common.” By the 20th century, however, the meaning of “vulgar” had changed to signify “indecent.” Thus, Christians stopped using the Latin word and used its English translation, Common, thus introducing “Common Era.”
It seems to me that CE began with Christian religious scholars -- the Catholic Encyclopedia. I am afraid I do not know much about the Jehovah's Witnesses, who I am told also eschew BC and AD; I gather they do not think of themselves as Christian, but they certainly are not Jewish. I do think it is interesting, though, that the alternative to A.D. was first introduced by Protestant and Catholic clerics. I believe this shows that there was a time when Christians understood and respected the fact that many people do not share their faith. I know many Christians who today share this understanding and respect. I just think it is both puzzling and a shame that others so resist the idea, that there are people out there who have other beliefs.
Argument 2: BCE/CE are POV
As to the second argument, that BCE and CE are themselves POV, there are four reasons given.
First Reason: Atheism
One, that BCE and CE are atheistic and suggest that God does not exist. This is patently not true. There is nothing in the words “Before” “Common” and “Era,” or in any combination of these words, that even hints that God does not exist. Moreover, many people who believe in God (including religious Jews and religious Christians referred to above) use BCE and CE.
Second Reason: Anti-Christianity
Two, that BCE and CE are anti-Christian because they deny that Jesus was Christ and Lord, or that he even existed. Again, this is patently absurd. There is nothing in the words “Before” “Common” and “Era,” or in any combination of these words, that even hints that Jesus was not Christ, let alone that he never existed. All it does is imply that there are people who do not believe that Jesus was Christ and Lord. Saying that “Jesus never existed” would indeed violate our NPOV policy. Saying “Some people believe Jesus never existed” is, however, NPOV. To say that BCE and CE are anti-Christian is tantamount to saying “NPOV is anti-Christian.”
BCE/CE makes no attack on Christianity, nor does it call into question any Christian beliefs. If simply acknowledges that there are people who do not share Christian beliefs. A devout Christian can use "BCE" and "CE without feeling that he or she is betraying his or her faith, because using these terms in no way negates their faith. The same cannot be said for non-Christians and BC/AD.
Third Reason: Personal POV
Three, some people have claimed that my saying that BCE and CE are simply my personal point of view. This is not true. That this is the year 2005 CE is not my point of view; my point of view is that this is the year 5765. That Caesar was assassinated in 44 BCE is not my point of view; my point of view is that Caesar was assassinated in 3716. This is using the Jewish Calendar. The Christian Calendar would have this year be AD 2005 and the year of Caesar’s assassination 44BC. That is the Christian POV. To say that it is 2005 CE, or that Caesar died in 44 BCE, takes neither my view nor the view of Jguk, Trodel, and others. It takes neither the Jewish nor the Christian POV. It is NPOV.
Fourth Reason: Essentially POV
Four, some people have suggested that BCE and CE by necessity and essentially reflect some point of view. Thus, Silversmith wrote: “The whole point behind inventing BCE/CE was POV! Someone decided they didn't like the meaning hidden, not only in an abbreviation, but also in Latin. So they decided to come up with another abbreviation, which they thought would be better.” Jguk wrote, “Also you seem to ignore that the very act of changing from BC/AD to BCE/CE notation is the expression of a POV.” Nobs asked, “As a newbie, let me see if I understand how to make the argument : "It is my POV that your POV is POV; whereas it is my POV that my POV is NPOV." is that it?”
This is perhaps the most ludicrous and offensive reason possible, because it amounts to a negation of our NPOV policy as a whole. In answer to Nob’s question, our Wikipedia: Neutral point of view policy is:
- A point here bears elaboration. We said that the neutral point of view is not, contrary to the seeming implication of the phrase, some actual point of view that is "neutral," or "intermediate," among the different positions. That represents a particular understanding of what "neutral point of view" means. The prevailing Wikipedia understanding is that the neutral point of view is not a point of view at all; according to our understanding, when one writes neutrally, one is very careful not to state (or imply or insinuate or subtly massage the reader into believing) that any particular view at all is correct.
Remember, this policy is non-negotiable. To suggest that "NPOV" is a "POV" and thus violates "NPOV" is absurd on its face. NPOV is not a POV, it is a policy about not elevating any POV to dominance. One cannot argue that NPOV is a POV; any such argument must immediately be dismissed.
Some people have offered a slightly different argument, not the “NPOV” is a POV, but rather that whether one prefers BC/AD or prefers BCE/CE depends on one’s point of view, and an NPOV article would explain this and provide both points of view. Silversmith argued this when he quoted our Wikipedia:Neutral point of view policy as saying,
- There is another reason to commit ourselves to this policy. Namely, when it is clear to readers that we do not expect them to adopt any particular opinion, this leaves them free to make up their minds for themselves, thus encouraging intellectual independence.
Silversmith is right, that NPOV leads us to include multiple points of view in articles. The problem here is not with the policy or the principle, but rather with how it is being applied. Specifically, the problem with this argument is that it applies only to an article on dating systems, not to an article that uses a dating system.
For example, an article on Jesus should include multiple points of view: Jesus was the messiah; Jesus was a false messiah; Jesus was a prophet; Jesus was the son of God, and so on. Including these multiple points of view is one important way of achieving an NPOV article.
Similarly, in an article on dating systems, NPOV requires us to say that some people use BC, and others use BCE.
But this is not an article on dating systems, it is an article on a historical figure and must thus use a dating system; the question is, which one? The Jewish system that Jesus himself used, by which he was born around 3756? Or the Christian system that dates his birth either to AD1 or 4 BC or 6 BC? To comply with our NPOV policy, we should not use either system. 1 CE, or 4 BCE or 6 BCE is neutral.
Argument 3: We Would Also Have to Reject the Gregorian Calendar
The third argument takes two forms. One, the claim that to reject BC and AD is to reject the Gregorian calendar. Two, the rhetorical question, “If you do not think the Gregorian calendar violates our NPOV policy, why do you think BC and AD do? Both of these forms have one thing in common: that the Gregorian calendar and BC/AD are inseparable. This view is implicit in those people who respond to criticisms of BC/AD by suggesting that the Gregorian calendar itself is being (or should be) challenged. Thus, Gene Nygaard wrote, “How would reading that Jesus was born 3,760 years after the beginning of the world (A.M.) force me not to believe that the Earth is about 4,500,000,000 years old? Isn't that terminology every but as much the pushing of a particular point of view as what you've been complaining about?” And Nobs wrote “I return to the fundemental premise, 2005 is not a random number pulled out of a hat. If these enlightened rationalist & truthseekers really want to establish factual truth, why then do they seek to assign the random number 2005 as being the current calender of reckoning, when as everyone knows, it's pure crap. Why don't they state thier real agenda, to make it the year 14,000,000,000 or 20,000,000,000, or thereabouts, to be scientifically and factually accurate.”
At first, I thought this was a red-herring. We are debating BC/AD, not the Gregorian calendar; why open up another can of worms. But I think I understand their point – isn’t the Gregorian Calendar representing the Christian point of view? I understand why they think so, but my answer is no.
It is true that the Gregorian calendar started as a Christian calendar. Christians believe it is AD 2005. Other religions and peoples have other calendars: for Jews, this is the year 5765. Muslims believe it is 1426 (I think, no disrespect if I am mistaken). I think the Chinese year is 4703. These are all different points of view.
But we do not live in a segregated world where Christians, Jews, Muslims, Chinese and others never have anything to do with one another. For Jews, Christians, Muslims, Chinese and others to be able to engage in commerce, share scholarly research, coordinate political activities, it is much more convenient to have one calendar.
The question of "which calendar" was settled by historical events. European colonial expansion beginning in the 1500s and peaking in the early 1900s involved the deliberate attempt to spread Christianity, by the late 1800s capitalism, and the calendar used by most Europeans, that is, the Gregorian calendar. Although the Gregorian calendar was created as a specifically Christian calendar, many non-Christians were forced to use it, and many more were encouraged to use it. The Gregorian calendar is now a convenient convention that Christians, Jews, Muslims, Chinese, Hindus, and others have "in common." That is why the terms "Before the Common Era" and "Common Era" are both accurate and neutral.
Grace Note, who favors AD, asks of the CE system "Who has it in common with whom?" But Nob, who also favors the AD system, provides the answer: the current system of dating (by which this is 2005) "is currently commonly used globally by all cultures and civilizations, Islamic, Sinic, Japanese, Hindu, etc."
I and many people like me — in fact most Jews I know – have no problem with Christians using BC and AD among themselves since it is after all their religion. Saying that this year is AD 2005 is the Christian point of view. But many people do not accept that Jesus is Lord. That reflects one point of view and is by no means neutral. But we are deeply offended when these terms are applied to ordinary events or even our own history, because we do not believe Jesus was Christ or the Lord.
Jews are willing to use the Gregorian calendar, as long as it is no longer strictly identified as "Christian." We can accept the numbers (e.g. 2005) as a convention, but this number (2005) has meaning because many people accept it as a convention. It is true that the Gregorian calendar is derived from an assumption about Jesus' birth, and an assumption that happens to be wrong to boot. But the same thing can mean very different things in different contexts. For Christians, 2005 may very well mean "2005 years since Jesus' birth." When Jews use "2005" they know that Christians think it is 2005 years since Jesus' birth. But that is not why Jews use "2005." The reason they use "2005" is because it has become a convention shared by (i.e. common to) many people worldwide. It is a convenience -- rather than have to convert the Jewish year to the Christian year to the Muslim year to the Hindu year whenever different people try to communicate, it makes sense to pick a convention. But Jews will never use “2005" because it is "the year of our Lord."
This is why we call it the "common era" -- because many non-Christian groups use it also. "Common" means shared by many people, and indeed many people, including people of different faiths and no faith, share the Gregorian calendar. This seems like a straightforward use of the word "common." The point is, they have the calendar in common, but they do not have belief that Jesus is Christ and Lord in common. They do not use this calendar because they believe Jesus is Christ or the Lord, they use it as a convention to coordinate activities and records of activities with one another. So CE makes perfect sense. Saying it is 2005 CE is the neutral point of view. Not my view (remember it is 5765) but a neutral point of view people all over the world can use to make commerce, politics, and other common activities easy to coordinate.
You are more than welcome to use AD when expressing your personal views. Similarly, I can use 5765 when expressing my views. But if we are going to write an article that is NPOV, we need to come up with something we can have in common. I will give up 5765 and share your Gregorian calendar because it is something most people today have in common. But that does not mean that most people have in common a belief that Jesus is Lord. If you want to participate in a common sphere with people who are different from you, you can't expect people to use "AD."
Argument 4: Unnecessary: BCE/CE means the same thing as BC/AD
The fourth argument is that BCE and BC really mean the same thing, and CE and AD mean the same thing. This was argued by Ben Standeven: “We shouldn't pretend that the Common Era is something different from the Anno Domini; they're just two different names for the same thing.”
This is not true (this is precisely the sort of thing Wittgenstein wrote volumes on). They are two different ways to refer to the same thing, but they are nevertheless different ways used in different contexts and thus have different meanings. Let me provide some examples: "The United States of America" and "The Great Satan" refer to the same thing, but have vastly different meanings. "H2O" and "Holy Water" are two different ways of referring to the same thing, but they have different meanings. "Sodomy" (in one of its forms), "blowjob" and "felatio" are three different ways of referring to the same thing, but they have different meanings. "Venus," "the evening star," and "the morning star" are three different ways of referring to the same thing, but they mean different things.
People often see two different things as “the same thing” from their point of view, when they are very different from another point of view. For example, a commuter who takes the 8:05 train to New York (or London) every day may say “I take the same train every day, the 8:05.” But a member of the maintenance crew might view the train that was used on Tuesday to be very different from the train that was used on Wednesday.
I grant that some people do not see a difference between AD and CE. But it is amply clear that many people do see a difference: one is POV and the other NPOV; one, in an appropriate religious context, is inoffensive, but in a secular or NPOV context very offensive. I have tried to explain why AD is POV and CE is not. If you still do not understand my arguments, and if you really, really see no difference between the two, please opt for the one that does not offend. I think our NPOV policy is more important, but I will settle for plain courtesy.
Revelant External Links
- Description of the calendar at H2G2 - presenting both sides of the argument, and apparently attempting to be NPOV.
- Student's Friend - arguring for BC/AD, with a response to criticims.
The Online Oxford English Dictionary (subscription required) references C.E. as Common Era; occas[ionaly] Christian Era and gives the following entmological reference: 1838 E. H. LINDO Jewish Calendar (title-p.), Tables for continuing the calendar to A.M. 6000-2240 *C.Æ. Ibid. 111 (heading) 3760 C.Æ. Commencement of the Christian Æra. 1886 K. MAGNUS (title) Outlines of Jewish History from B.C. 586 to C.E. 1885.
Discussion
See /Discussion.
Vote for 3rd alternative
For a vote on a 3rd option see /Alternatives.
Votes
See /Votes.
Alternative Solution
Wouldn’t it be easier if we simply used BC ("Before Christ") and AC ("After Christ")? Kiumars
- The objection to BCE/CE (whether you agree or not) is that its an attempt to foist a novel naming convention when there is nothing wrong with the traditional BC/AD. The objection to BC/AD is that it acknowledges the Christian deity (even if only the objectors are aware of it). I cannot see either side being attracted to your well-meaning suggestion ClemMcGann 15:30, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
So if we follow that logic and are consistent with it...
So if we follow that logic and are consistent with it, then we should do an overhaul in the sciences and mathematics: astronomy (Mercury, Venus, Mars etc.), chemistry, (e.g. "Thorium" comes from "Thor", "Uranium" "Uranus", "Plutonium" "Pluto"), "Hypnosis" comes from the Greek God "Hypnos"; English days of the week ["Tuesday" from "Týr", "Wednesday" from "Wuodan" (Old English for "Odin") etc.] If you are going to eliminate/change terms solely because they have a religious connotation and people are "offended" by it, then apply the same standard to the rest of the English Language and the sciences and other academia.
Anything and everything is "offensive" if one thinks hard enough or wants it to be true. And whose feelings of offense should take precedence, the religious or nonreligious?