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talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Delete While some organizations may have all female staff, I see no reason to split off women in mixed gender staff areas. It is an unneeded way to split people.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:46, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per BrownHairedGirl. Absolutely nothing wrong with using this as a parent for the Columbia University category or other such categories. We can always tag it for {{db-c1}} if appropriate. However, other such categories exist; see the subcategories of
Category:Ordained Christian women, for example.
Nyttend (
talk)
02:07, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The only contents are up for deletion, so if the other cats are deleted this will be empty. The Christian women is a different issue - those are specific roles for women, and "Christian" is not really an organization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
16:29, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I said the subcats, which include organization-related things such as the abbesses. "Christian" isn't an organization, but Christianity is. Your comments seem quite irrelevant, so I'm guessing that you're making relevant comments that I've misinterpreted. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the point of the category? Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the nomination? Please help me understand your meaning better.
Nyttend (
talk)
22:42, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
No,
Christianity isn't an organization. It is a religion (actually, it describes a number of different dogmas). There's a huge difference. I think you were suggesting that
Category:Ordained Christian women may be relevant to this category, but I disagree - that category doesn't need a different parent, and in any case for religious orders there are specific roles laid out for women, which is much less the case with other types of organizations. In any case, I agree with BHG, once it's empty we should delete it.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
23:16, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Navy of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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Nominator's rationale:Rename or upmerge. I figured that like most topic categories, this one should be renamed to match its corresponding main article:
Real Marina (Kingdom of the Two Sicilies). This was opposed in the speedy section (see below) based on the argument that categories for navies use purely English names. But I noted that with the exception of this one, all of the categories are named after the corresponding main article—it just so happens that usually the corresponding main article is in English! Anyway, perhaps with only a main article and a subcategory, we don't even need the category at all, in which case it could be upmerged?
Good Ol’factory(talk)20:09, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I'm not sure your sense of a convention there is necessarily accurate. It just as easily could be said that the convention is that the categories are named after the main article, which is the overriding general convention anyway.
Good Ol’factory(talk)02:32, 21 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Well, yeah—because the main articles for each uses the English name. If you look hard enough, you can find "patters" and "conventions" that seem to be based on any number of factors, but they are not necessarily the controlling one.
Good Ol’factory(talk)21:17, 22 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Oppose for the same reasons as given in the CFDS. Stating that "the reason all the other categories are in English is because the main articles are all in English and thus the convention is to follow the main article" is
WP:WIKILAWYERING; regardless of why, having one category that doesn't fit the pattern would be
ridiculous. Regardless of how the convention came about, the convention of
Category:Navies by country has become "English names". -
The BushrangerOne ping only04:09, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
oppose -- Real Marina translates as Royal Navy. The English WP should steer away from having articles with large amounts of (or titles in) foreign languages.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
17:01, 1 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Oppose. The proper way to achieve this move is a discussion on moving the article about the navy to its Italian title. When article is different from the rest, without an apparently good reason, the solution is to move the article instead of asking that its category get renamed. Remember that a category dependent on an article will be eligible for a speedy move if the article in question is moved after discussion.
Nyttend (
talk)
02:01, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Urban legends in video games
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Nominator's rationale: urban legends are many; they are tropes, by definition almost, so much fiction would be amiss if it didn't include an urban legend here or there. I don't think this is defining. I looked at the articles for these games, and didn't find many that even mentioned "urban legend"
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:01, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Video games featuring protagonists of selectable gender
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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The result of the discussion was:no consensus, defaulted to keep. Good arguments from both sides, none of them being obviously stronger than the opponents.--
Ymblanter (
talk)
18:41, 19 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: According to the study by EEDAR (referenced here:
http://penny-arcade.com/report/article/games-with-female-heroes-dont-sell-because-publishers-dont-support-them), 45% of games in their sample included the ability to select a female protagonist, or select the gender of the protagonist.As such, I don't think this is defining. They only found a few percent with exclusively female protagonists, which is I think the figure that is more of interest. I think this category doesn't help, since it could group any game where you can choose the name of your character and pick an icon - boy or girl - to represent yourself - that to me is not what people are discussing when considering female leads. You can't choose to be someone other than Ms PacMan or Lara Croft (I don't think) - if the choice of a female lead is forced, that is a decision that has marketing implications, and the lack of such games is what causes the debate. This particular category should be deleted as not defining.
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:54, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
It's about user-created protag in single player only option, as explained in the (defining) description. There are only few such games. Also it was split from the main cat because people requested it to be subcatted. And yes, FemShep is exactly what people actually discuss, and not MS Pacman (a forgotten charakter from 3 decades ago). --
Niemti (
talk)
21:20, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
the study linked above found 45% of games allowed selection of the character's gender. The discussion about femshep may be it interesting in an article but is not enough to form the basis of categorization. Also I don't think femshep is user-created really, but that's besides the point. The point is, many many games allow you to play as a character of either gender. What is interesting is that there are many more games that only can be played as male, and very few games that can only be played as female. I don't know why you dismiss ms pacman, it's sort of a classic example and I havent forgotten it.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:56, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Lear2read: "Video games with the player-customized gender of the lead characters during the character creation process (only for the single-player oriented games featuring starting main characters)." There's no "many". Also, there's no "45" anywhere in your false source link. Learn2read2: "In all three genres, a little under 300 games gave the option of a female lead. That includes games where you can choose your gender or create your own character" and opnly the last part is any relevant (but most of it is MMOs anyway). As I said, stuff like Femshep (1,250,000 Google results for Femshep, only 228,000 for Ms Pacman despite or because being more than 2 decades older). --
Niemti (
talk)
23:44, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
please be careful with your arrogant 'learn2read' exhortations, if you read the source it is indeed 45% of sample. I'd much rather trust a source that took a random sample of games and analyzed them that take into account your own personal guesstimates of the frequency of such games.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:46, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep300 / 669 = 0.448, so 45% is fairly accurate. However I disagree with rationale as not defining. This category's intention is to identify games that are not lead gender restricted. Obi-Wan Kenobi's rationale seems to focus on a related but separate Female Leads categorization.
\ | - | / | - | \ | - | / (
talk)
02:04, 3 December 2013 (UTC)reply
no, my rationale is that anything which, when sampled, applies to 45% of games is not defining. It's also not defining because if I look at the lede for most of these games it doesn't say 'you can choose a boy or girl character'. Finally it's not defining because the literature in this space has focused on the number of games which are only male, vs the small number of games which are only female. The middle ground, where you can choose to be pacman or ms pacman, is not worth categorizing on.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:43, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Then why not categorize on games where you can customize the protagonist? There are many games where you can choose the protagonist's name, or the color of the car they drive, or their clothes, or their hairstyle, etc. Also, if this is only about designing new characters from a template, why do you mention femshep above? Again, per the research above, 45% of games in their sample allowed you to select the gender. This is not defining of the game.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:03, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per
WP:PERFECTION and
WP:PRESERVE. It's clear from the available references at articles, that reliable sources are noting and classifying different types of female characters in video games. Even if this category and the one below about non-playable female main characters would not satisfy all the letters of this or that content guideline (something that I don't agree is the case here, but even if it was), the right answer is to WP:FIXTHEPROBLEM, not to delete everything.
If we keep deleting every attempt made to address the description of the topic made by sources, the only thing we achieve is forcing the next editor to start from scratch and build a new imperfect categorization of the topic, with all the previous accumulated knowledge lost. If we instead recognize that
there is no deadline, we can use these categories as the starting point of a more refined, better classification and categorization; we will be able to build the
one step at a time, instead of requiring that it appears perfectly formed from scratch.
Diego (
talk)
23:46, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
these are not imperfect cats, they are not defining cats. You can apply perfection and preserve to any arbitrary category, so that argument carries no special currency here. You can find literature that talks about and lists games with male leads, but I also don't think we should categorize based on that. It is not the case that we should categorize on every characteristic that some literature covers somewhere, we have to appy editorial judgement. In this case, with 45% if games qualifying here as allowing gender selection, that's far too common to merit categorization accordingly.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:43, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You're right when you say that PRESERVE is a policy that applies always (and therefore we have to follow it unless you explicitly provide a reason why not following it would improve Wikipedia - which you didn't). Also in case of disagreement, editorial judgement is best informed by what external sources say - so, the fact that they cover the topic as a defining characteristic (namely, that
these games sell less copies) is a huge reason to keep the classification.
Diego (
talk)
19:03, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Far too detailed of a selection (Mass Effect and the impact on romance notwithstanding), the fact one can select a gender for their mane character is really too much a detail. Games that allow you to design the player's protagonist, yes, that's a good category, and it is implicit in that that the gender is one of those that can be selected (even if it is not 100% of the time). --
MASEM (
t)
21:47, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I guess forgot to say keep. But this "Games that allow you to design the player's protagonist" thing I might also agree on. --
Niemti (
talk)
11:12, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Terms of French origin
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Nominator's rationale: The current contents are all lists and the category is under a lists category. Alternatively this category could be deleted and the current content (one category) could be upmerged.
DexDor (
talk)
19:15, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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Category:Video games featuring non-playable female protagonists
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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The result of the discussion was:DELETE. The passage of time here makes closure difficult. I understand from the final comment that an editorial move has apparently already taken place (
User:Niemti's contribs list does not indicate in edit summary whether this is true or not, though), which seems reinforced by the fact this cat as of this moment contains only one article. So I think I will delete this category, but allow that if I misunderstood an old situation that we can recreate the cat. -
Splash -
tk21:39, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: While I can understand the need for a category of games where a gamer can play a female character, I don't see the need for a category of games where the antagonist (e.g the evil queen, the princess-in-need-of-help) is female, and I don't think this is defining. When people talk about gender in games, and the need to balance, I don't think they're talking about games where an army of dudes teams up to defeat an evil supercomputer with a female voice.
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
18:53, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I don't doubt that people discuss female villains; the point is, it is not the lack of female villains that is decried - it is the lack of playable female characters that women gamers (and others) can identify with that is really defining for the games in question. For example, several books and critics and articles discuss games with female sidekicks, or games with female secondary characters, or games with damsels in distress, but we aren't going to categorize on that either. I think overall we have overcategorization in these video games, and several of these categories need pruning, but starting to categorize games by the gender of non-playable characters just goes too far.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:31, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
My recollection is that several people in their comments, in that discussion and in the previous one, mentioned the criteria of playability. I think if you were to ask them, most would assume that protagonist *meant* "main character that you can play" - for example, see the following links:
Most of the articles I have read on this subject focus on this issue of protagonist as playable character. For another example, Sarkeesian's video on "Damsel in distress" discusses how a would-be protagonist was turned into a damsel-in-distress instead.
[11]
One of the most famous recent non-playable female lead characters, Yorda, is feted as a great female character, but importantly, she is NOT described as a protagonist.
Lists, such as this one, include only playable characters:
[12]
net net, I think the idea that protagonist can include non-playable characters is really an edge case, and in any case, I think the utility of categorizing games where a non-playable main character is a woman is pretty weak, as this just brings us back to the damsel-in-distress tropes. If the point of this category is to mirror the discussions happening about female protagonists, we should follow the common-sense definitions and keep it to only playable ones.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
08:04, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
@Obiwankenobi. If you think that the only non-playable main characters are the damsels in distress, you haven't looked at the contents of the category with much care. Most of those characters are not damsels in distress, and several (Galatea, Grace from Façade) are much more important to the story than the player character. Your main argument (that a different criterion exists for other category should prevent this category from existing) doesn't make any sense.
Diego (
talk)
23:35, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Diego has just changed the inclusion criteria back to include antagonists and secondary characters who are female. This only strengthens the reasoning to delete - just because one villain or one secondary character in a game is a female, how is that defining of the game? For example, in Halo, the computer who helps you has a female persona - but the whole game you're playing the master chief, who seems rather male. I don't think those decrying the lack of female protagonists had Halo in mind as a model of how to incorporate women into games. The key point made in the literature is identification of the player with the character they are playing, and the financial costs and poor market for games where there is only a female lead to play, since (presumably) the majority of male gamers don't want to play such games. But those same gamers have no problems buying Halo by the millions in spite of a female computer AI.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
00:02, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I'm actually cool with changing it to simply (gender neutral) non-playable protagonists, and including the male ones, while adding those ones back to the main category for female game protagonists. Diego did the sub-cat just because it has been requested. --
Niemti (
talk)
02:01, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I would be OK too with moving it to a gender-neutral category if that is proposed, though I don't think male non-playable protagonists receive as much attention from the media as to be notable; female characters are noted precisely because of their rarity. (This makes the comparison with "films with female stars" moot, BTW - in contrast to films, there are very few games with female protagonists).
Diego (
talk)
18:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Unlike the previous category about female protagonists (Which there was agreement needed significant refinement), here, the problem is that nearly all games have a non-player protagonist - if not several - and thus this is too broad a classification. "List of video games with non-playable female companions" may have something to it, that would be your Ico, Half-Life 2, Last of Us, etc., and be far more discriminating than the case for games that just have a female character that is on the same side as the main character. --
MASEM (
t)
21:45, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You still don't understand the term
protagonist, don't you? It's nothing about any "character that is on the same side as the main character" (aka good guy) or some other nonsense from your imagination. I think I also told you this already, but I guess I need to repeat ad infinitum: the mere companions are usually
sidekicks (and sidekicks are not protagonists). There are actually far more female sidekicks than non-playable protagonists (many/most RPGs feature the sidekicks, for example), they include such notable characters like
Yuffie Kisaragi,
Cortana,
Annah-of-the-Shadows,
EVA (Metal Gear),
Lulu (Final Fantasy),
Grace Nakimura,
Midna, and more, while the only (mostly) non-playable protagonist with an article is Zelda and maybe ALSO Midna (I'm not a Legend of Zelda expert). The subject of female companions/sidekicks might be a subject for another (and much bigger) category if you wish to make one, but the purpose of this sub-categorty was to make the main category smaller, just as it was requested by somebody (Obi
just deleted this request). The other sub-category was made for the same purpose too. --
Niemti (
talk)
01:18, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
And because I really need to repeat stuff for you always, here's what a non-playable female protagonist actually is (from this very thread, which you didn't read):
Ghost in the Shell (video game) follows
Motoko Kusanagi in the story cutscenes, the male player character is just some random nameless dude shooting stuff in the gameplay sections. In
Lifeline (video game) and
The Daedalus Encounter the male player character is only helping the protagonist(s) through a live feed sort connection. (The player character is their sidekick.) In
Silent Hill: Shattered Memories the male player character from the "actual" gameplay sections was imaginary and didn't exist. --
Niemti (
talk)
01:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
"Protagonist" is meant to be a very narrow term for a work of fiction; there is almost no way that a video game can have a "non-player protagonist" since that means the player-character is not the main character. (I am not discounting there may be some, but that's going to be rare). But you're not using that definition, neither here nor on the female protagonist page, you're taking too broad a stroke. That's the problem here, you can't run these both ways. And given what the decision was on keeping the female protagonists but with the appropriate narrowing to what protagonists are supposed to be, this category will not survive. --
MASEM (
t)
02:00, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
And it indeed is a very narrow term, while you're confusing it with good guy / bad guy. Now would you click my examples from above sometimes and read the articles and gasp at these incredible marvels there? And as I told you already more than once (but I need to repeat) it is, generally, already narrowed to what protagonists are supposed be (and morever, it was always this way). In the case of this category I'm uncertain only about Zelda's role (classificiation), but that's another story (not for now and here). And yes, there are actually far more simple companions aka sidekicks than non-playable protagonists (contrary to your opinion, and again repeating myself). --
Niemti (
talk)
02:04, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
there is almost no way that a video game can have a "non-player protagonist" since that means the player-character is not the main character. See, we are in agreement; female protagonist characters in video games are rare in general, and having these particular characteristics (both "protagonist" and "non-playable") is even rarer. That's why this category contains so few games: there are really a small amount of characters belonging to the group. Therefore, the category will always be small - I can't understand your "delete" !vote on the basis that it's a broad classification, and your previous assertion that "nearly all games have a non-player protagonist" doesn't make sense. This category is intended to compile those few rare exceptions when they exist and have been noted by RSs to the point of being described in an article. We would agree that including companions and side-kicks (thus, characters "on the same side as the main character") would make the category much larger, but they're explicitly excluded by the defining topic and inclusion criteria.
Diego (
talk)
18:46, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Mainly due to the lack of notability, and that this is going to be a huge list very quickly. I understand it's okay for huge lists on wikipedia, but I think it would easier to simply list the games that feature playable female protagonists, since it would be far more unique.
Whatever told you "this is going to be a huge list very quickly"? It's actually a small category (23 articles right now) and unlikely to get much bigger, also because it's the non-playable ones are the ones that are truly unique (in video games, the game's protagonists are usually playable, that is directly controllable by the player). And "more importantly": this is not an "article". --
Niemti (
talk)
11:38, 28 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Change to Gender Neutral No need to be touchy, although you do make some good points. I was just a little confused regarding how we classify what a protagonist is in a video game (what about antiheroes? What about Zelda? what about freeman-esque characters?). You mentioned before that a gender neutral category is a possibility, i'll go with that since you've proven to me how unique this is.
BallroomBlitzkriegBebop (
talk)
01:18, 30 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Category:American models by city
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the discussion was:MERGE and DELETE to the second indicated category. This appears to have happened with the passage of time since the nomination. Also, most of the original categories appear to have been deleted as creations of a banned user. The de facto outcome has been that the second of the two merge targets has been created, and all but a few originals then deleted. I will follow that pattern for the few that remain. I note that there are requests for a two-way merge, but that can always be accomplished just editorially, there is no need for a CfD to approve it at this stage. -
Splash -
tk21:27, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale:Delete with all subcategories, as overcategorization. Merge up to state-level categories, as overcategorization. This is enough of a non-defining characteristic that
WP:OC#LOCATION uses "models by city" as an example of categorization to avoid. Mbinebritalk ←13:46, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
There's no real "typically" here. We categorize by states and cities when necessary, based on relevance and the need to manage larger categories. City-based categorization fails both points. Not to mention, I'm not sure how you can make your argument when, judging from your edit history, you're having to make significant changes to numerous category trees in order fit this "typical" method of categorization in, for modeling occupation cats and beyond. Mbinebritalk ←17:09, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
There's way too many American models, it only makes sense to break it down further IMO. I'm only trying to populate cities where there's a significant number.--
Oriole85 (
talk)
18:53, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Support The parent cat is more than enough. Subcat down to municipality is drilling way too deep down into the weeds to be of use for anything but making busywork for avid categorizers.
Erictalk19:21, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Support but with procedural point. In fact, I think the intersection of models and city is a step too far. In fact a few months ago I argued we had gone too far with the intersection of city and occupation, but it was too broad for an easy CFD. In this case, to do anything we need to have individual nominations of each specific by city category involved.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
22:00, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Yeah I can get behind this, I think with NYC/LA/other large cities it's great to separate them like we do with actors. If there isn't enough material, a category shouldn't exist.--
Oriole85 (
talk)
22:27, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep until empty. I entirely agree that categorising models by city is an irrelevant intersection of occupation and location. However, this category is only a container, and so long as we have categories for each city, this container category serves an important navigational function. If anyone wants to nominate the sub-cats for upmerger, I will enthusiastically support that proposal, but until the sub-cats are deleted, this one should stay. I urge
the nominator to withdraw this nomination. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
11:13, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Merge to the relevant states. I agree that categorizing by city is over-categorizing. What will we do for models from small towns? Also, most of the categories are very small, and will probably remain too small to be useful.
Howicus(Did I mess up?)19:11, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
@
Howicus, I also that categorizing by city is over-categorizing. However, this nomination will not cause even one article to be re-categorised, because the articles are in sub-categories which have not been included in this nomination. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:47, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Note to closing admin. The stated intention of this nomination is to remove the models-by-city categories, and most editors in this discussion support that goal. However, before closing this CFD, please note that the proposed action will not achieve that. The effect of this nom would simply be to remove a single container category, making it harder to track down the categories which editors want upmerged. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:54, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Indeed,
Obi, and you were not alone. However, subcategories which are neither tagged nor nominated cannot be merged by this discussion, so I wanted to draw the attention of the closing admin to the fact that the discussion here has been about a proposal which is not actually on the table. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
11:45, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Not really done. Most of the categories have not been tagged, and those which have been tagged do not link properly to this section, because the anchor is missing the prefix "Category:".
Okay, you want the second merge targets in (which no one else seems concerned with), so why are you telling this person? What does it have to do with them? Or is this just a passive aggressive attempt to get my attention? Because you could, you know, go the direct route and just leave me a note on my talk page. Mbinebritalk ←20:49, 3 December 2013 (UTC)reply
@
Mbinebri:, a little
civility and an
assumption of good faith goes a long way. I was simply replying to the latest editor to support a nomination's rationale while overlooking the adverse consequences of its actual effect. A nominator may make whatever proposal they like, but other editors take responsibility for whether they support it. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
22:52, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Project Catwalk (Netherlands)
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Comment Apparently, I created this category but I don't create categories for just one article. Was this category emptied? Were there more articles that were tagged with this category like show contestants or seasons? I can't figure out what happened here.
LizRead!Talk!12:55, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Comment I don't know. I didn't remove any pages from the category, and it had only page in it, when this nomination was made.
There are the edits you near the creation of this category.
ArmbrustTheHomunculus14:08, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Wow, I blew it here. I usually don't create a category unless there are at least 5 or 6 child categories/articles (and hopefully many more than that). I'm glad you caught this, this should be a speedy delete.
This was a bad call on my part and all I can think of is when I'm working categorizing a field like TV series or descent or actors or anything that looks like it needs tending, I look at the whole, largest category and work very systematically...I must have mistakenly believed there were more related articles that would go in that category when the fact is that the one article that does exist is terrible, barely a stub. I'll slow down and be more careful.
LizRead!Talk!22:47, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Bicontinental countries
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delete this is not defining for the countries in question, like many other geographical features. The list is largely sufficient and explains the context in much more detail than a binary category could.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:45, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete It still does not include France, which maybe is tri-continental if we consider all the departments. How does East Timor belong here? It is not in two continents, the only thing may be some people disagree on which continent it is in.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:52, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete -- Unnecessary. The appropiate course is to categorise Russia as in Europe and in Asia. Countries with overseas departments (such as France) should not be included.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
17:07, 1 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Ghanaian Football Clubs
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Nominator's rationale: I'm not especially experienced with categories, but I was under the impression that category redirects were supposed to be used sparingly, perhaps for common mistakes users would be likely to make. This doesn't seem to be such a redirect. --
BDD (
talk)
06:41, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Uncle Grandpa
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Nominator's rationale: Cat has 3 pages. Series it covers is roughly new (2013). I don't see why this cartoon needs a separate category all its own.
Paper LuigiT •
C04:07, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Comment: Actually, it seems that there are only two pages in this category; the series itself and the list of episodes. That said, the spin-off series, Secret Mountain Fort Awesome and its own episode list could probably be added. How about
Peter Browngardt? Are series creators typically included in these categories? If Uncle Grandpa and Secret Mountain Fort Awesome each had character lists, then this would probably be worth keeping. As it is though, I'm sort of on the fence. I'll abstain from voting, but there probably wouldn't be any harm in deleting this for now. It can always be brought back sometime down the road, if more articles are ever created. --
Jpcase (
talk)
22:25, 10 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Cyprus youth international footballers
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Nominator's rationale: Only the top (major) youth national teams from each country should be given it's own category and the lower youth levels grouped together. –
Michael (
talk)
02:17, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Solitary Animals
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The result of the discussion was:DELETE. This is an exceptionally well-argued debate, and I am glad of the great assistance it provides to a closing admin who has no expertise in the area. My delete conclusions is based on the fact that the keepers have not persuaded the weightier deleters that there is a clear-enough rule that can be followed in populating this category due to the many and varied types of behaviour a particular animal might have, which variations cannot be expressed by the category alone. It is observed that a/the list could do this job with the degree of subtlety and analysis it requires. -
Splash -
tk21:48, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: Random and rather subjective category. Animals could be categorized by hundreds of different physical traits or behaviour, but we don't because whether an animal has brown fur, or has four legs or is solitary or gregarious is not an essential defining feature.
BabelStone (
talk)
00:15, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
It's not easy to determine what is an appropriate category, especially if you're new to Wikipedia. As a rule of thumb, if you want to create a category that will apply to dozens or hundreds of articles then think twice about it, because there is probably a good reason the category has not already been created. And if you still think it would be a good idea then it might be a good idea to raise it at the appropriate Wikipedia project (
WikiProject Animals in this case) first.
BabelStone (
talk)
19:26, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep: There are currently 96 articles in this category. It is a subcat of
Category:Behavior, which has many articles and subcategories, so there is clearly precedent for behavior being categorized. Even if that isn't the best parent cat, there is also
Category:Group processes, and
Category:Behavioral ecology. And actually, herding or solitary behavior can be an essential defining feature, particularly for endangered species, captive breeding, or even things like potential for domestication.
Montanabw(talk)04:49, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Um, no we don't. We classify by
Tetrapod, which is a superclass within the formal biological classification system, and includes descendants of four-limbed vertebrates. Some tetrapods have lost their limbs (eg snakes). I hardly think people would say that the
Eagle has four legs, either. So, your comment is misplaced and inaccurate.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:01, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
An eagle has four limbs, though. What this shows is that if you stay with the scientific terms used in biology definitions, all those doubts about the ambiguity of the common words disappear, and you can have perfectly defined categories. If you insist in using the plain meaning of the word of course it will introduce uncertainty - but that doesn't mean that the category is badly defined, only that you're using it wrong.
Diego (
talk)
08:03, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
But a snake doesn't, and a snake is a tetrapod. That to me demonstrates that a biological classification based on a well-established category tree is reasonable, but 4-legged or 4-limbed animals would not be.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
10:21, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
comment ultimately, this is a classic example where categories don't work, but lists may. there are many overlapping definitions for sociality in animals - for example, to what extent to they exhibit gregarious behavior, which is different than being social, and then different types of being social, such as
Eusociality,
Presociality,
Subsociality, etc. But I don't think we should start a socio-biology categorization system here - there is simply no clear divide between "solitary" and "non-solitary" animals - as some animal are solitary for part of their lives, and social for others; other times, some animals of the same species will be found in groups while others will be solitary. Lists can capture such nuance, but categorization - esp set categorization, should be relatively black and white, and I don't think there are black and white boundaries here.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:48, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
That's a classic
WP:NOTDUP argument - that a list may exist doesn't mean that a similar category shouldn't. If an animal species are solitary during part of their lives and sometimes lives in groups, you can include it in both categories - you don't need to draw a divide line, as categories are not disjunctive; what matters is how biologists have classified it. If an animal is of difficult or impossible categorization under this category because it's not a defining trait for that species, it will not have been included in either group by biologists, so that difficulty shouldn't blurry the category (if we were thwarted by such problems, we wouldn't have categories at all).
Diego (
talk)
20:04, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
No, that's not what I said. I didn't say "a list exists, therefore we don't need a category" - instead I made the argument that this is one of those cases, and we have many, where lists are appropriate but categories are not. The reason is that I haven't found reliable sources that have a consensus-agreed-upon categorization of "solitary" animals, and what this means exactly. It's true, some scientific papers will call animal X solitary, but then you can find a scientific paper on the same animal talking about it's social behavior traits. They will also say things like "This animal is relatively asocial" - what does that mean? How can we categorize based on that? Finally, different species of the same order or genus can exhibit different social behavior - for example, you added Octopus, but at least one species of Octopus is *not* solitary: [
[14]]. By categorizing them, we are basically saying "All octopus are asocial/solitary/whatever", even if that's not the case. If we had a list, we could say "The Octopus is often considered a solitary animal, meeting with its mate only to reproduce, but they exhibit hierarchical social behavior in laboratory conditions and in constrained environments, and there are several species that live in groups" - you can't say all that in a category. OTOH, claiming a species uses tools is just that - a claim that some members of a species have been seen to use tools. Please show me these biologist-agreed-upon categorizations of levels of animal social interaction, with membership lists by species. My guess is, you won't find it. Ultimately, solitary is a subjective/descriptive term, and it may well be true that most octopii are relatively solitary, but exceptions are bad for categorization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:23, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You don't need to say "The Octopus is often considered a solitary animal, meeting with its mate only to reproduce...". You can say that in the Octopus article, and link that article from the category so that interested readers can find it. Wikipedia categories are primarily navigational devices, not computational ontologies. Claiming that articles in a category must exhibit binary true-false properties is a red herring (as well as your false dichotomy implying that a solitary animal can't have social traits) - all we need is that the topics of those articles are verifiably members of a general class as defined by the sources. We are not doing math here, but categorizing information for later retrieval.
Diego (
talk)
20:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think you misunderstand categorization then. For set categories, at least, entries should exhibit such true-false properties, because membership itself is binary; categories which are at risk of more subjective criteria are frequently brought here to be killed off. Please read
Wikipedia:OCAT#SUBJECTIVE - "Solitary" is a good example of such a subjective adjective. It's not clear from any sources I've seen how much solitary behavior an animal must exhibit, and at what points in its life, and whether both males and females need to exhibit this behavior to merit the category of "solitary". Yes, wikipedia categories are navigational in nature, but they are also not supposed to be subjective, which this one is, that's the bottom line. What exactly will establish that an octopus is a solitary animal per RS? 10 papers calling them solitary? Is the Octopus' form of solitary/asocial behavior similar to the asocial/solitary behavior of the bear or the leopard - e.g. are there common characteristics which define "solitary"? What about
Eledone, a whole genus of octopus considered "social", or Octopus joubini, O. briareus, O. bimaculoides which live in high densities? At what point are there enough exceptions to the general "solitary" behavior pattern such that Octopus no longer qualifies as "solitary"? Again, please bring me the sources that define the consensus view of what "solitary" means, and then which place species into this continuum. Additionally, given that you want to categorize based on subjective adjectives, shall we also start to categorize social animals as well? There is a vast literature on this topic. To give you a flavor, here is a chapter on the social behavior of octopi
[15] - note how the author describes several different types of behavior that exhibit social or asocial traits, such as avoidance or tolerance of conspecifics, toleration of crowding, formation of size-based dominance relationships, territoriality, clumping aggregations, or young
Octopus rubescens forming
shoals off the coast of California. When you sum all this up, you basically get "Octopi are generally asocial, but they have lots of complex social interactions when living close together, and there are several exceptions, including some species which group in shoals". That's not a good basis for categorization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:18, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Oh, I see. I disagree with you, therefore I don't understand Wikipedia? Under your criterion we couldn't have categories for
Category:Skyscrapers (when does one building start being "tall"?) or
Category:Edible plants (whether something is "edible" is subject to much more uncertainty than whether an animal lives in herds. Does "wood" count as edible even if it can't be digested? There are people with allergy to nuts! are those edible?). The criterion for defining categories has always been whether we can
verify the inclusion of the item in the category, not that the category itself is binary.
All those complexities you introduce are up to biologists to assess, not Wikipedians. If a species has been classified as nongregarious (the precise term, not the informal adjective), of course that creates a well defined classification. Your arguments at most amount for a renaming to
Category:Nongregarious animals, not for deletion.
Diego (
talk)
08:22, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Nongregarious animals are not the same as solitary animals. Again, if you want to make an argument to keep, you need to bring some sources that define these terms clearly, and classify animals accordingly. When I looked at some literature on nongregarious animals, it had phrases like "relatively nongregarious", showing that this is also not a black and white categorization, but rather a qualitative assessment of the degree of social interaction they regularly exhibit. As for skyskrapers, there are institutes which have more precise definitions of tall buildings, and it would be reasonable to recategorize based on these more solid definitions vs the vague skyskrapers which doesn't have a firm definition. As for edible, I don't think there's as much uncertainty as you note. In any case, edibility is simpler to determine than the collection of different social behaviors which make an animal gregarious/social/asocial/solitary, because these behaviors vary over time, across species, across geographies, and with different ecological circumstances, whereas a given species of plant will almost always either be edible, or not. You are right that at the end of the day, perhaps we don't always achieve pure black/white, but I do think we should get as close as we can, and in this particular case my judgement and the judgement of others !voting is that this categorization falls too close to subjectivity.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
10:21, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete. -- Solitary vs social behavior is matter of relative degrees and circumstances, not a neat yes/no box that animals can be sorted into. If we ever did want to group animals together by some behavior, that information needs to be in a list with proper citations and annotations to reflect the complexity of nature. --
Yzx (
talk)
20:54, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete per Obi and Yzx. There may be some animals that clearly fit the definition of a
solitary animal (and some that clearly don't), but there are also animals that may, for example, hunt alone and then return to a group. Unless there is an intent to categorize all/most animals by their (non)solitary status we shouldn't categorize just a tiny fraction of the total species by this characteristic. The article at
Solitary animal is short and unreferenced (compare, for example, with
Predation) which suggests that this is not a good characteristic for categorization (if there aren't sufficient editors with the knowledge/interest to improve that article then I doubt there are the editors needed to fully populate/maintain a category tree based on that characteristic). Any new categorization scheme that could include thousands of articles should not be created without a clear consensus at the relevant wikiproject(s).
DexDor (
talk)
21:38, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
WP:ATA (which, by thee way, is an essay) is primarily about articles. Some parts of it may (also) be applicable to categories, but some parts are really only applicable to articles.
WP:UGLY etc say we shouldn't delete an article just because it's poor quality (e.g. incomplete or messy). Such an article may not do much harm (e.g. it may have few inlinks and may have cleanup tags warning readers) and, most importantly, it may contain cited encyclopedic information which would be lost from WP if the article is deleted. The costs/benefits of a category can not be assessed in exactly the same way.
DexDor (
talk)
20:25, 7 December 2013 (UTC)reply
That doesn't make any more valid your argument that a new category should be created in a perfect state and only after requesting permission in the form of previous consensus, and still doesn't answer the ultimate question: how in your opinion does deleting this category improve Wikipedia?
Diego (
talk)
22:52, 7 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Because it elevates to the level of "in-out" the notion of "solitary" animals, which is nonetheless subjective; it's bad for wikipedia because it's misleading to users. I've given copious examples above that your addition of
Octopus to the category is problematic, because while often described as such, there are species of octopus and circumstances under which the octopus is anything but solitary. I would expect that many other animals would have similar cases. "Solitary" is a fuzzy topic - how solitary must an animal be before it gets in this category? What if the males are solitary, but the females are gregarious? Attempting to categorize a whole package of behaviors and defining inclusion criteria for in/out makes this the very essence of a subjective category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
00:16, 8 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Ah, it surfaces what bothers you - let's turn it into actionable information. See, that potential problem you identify doesn't mean that be should delete the whole thing, as it can be dealt with. Don't you see that you're
projecting your own assumptions onto the general readership? The category would only be confusing to those readers who share the same preconception that the category would describe a binary black/white property of the animals included (and would be useful to any other reader). However, it only takes that we
describe the inclusion criteria in the category page in order to dispel those preconceptions and making clear how readers should interpret the inclusion of a species in the category, thus avoiding the possible confusion you describe.
For cases like for example the
oceanic whitetip shark, described by a reliable source as
primarily solitary, (but) observed in "feeding frenzies" when a food source is present. Such exceptions merit a detailed discussion of each unclear entry on a case-by-case basis, but they don't invalidate the validity of the topic for species clearly described as "solitary", "primarily solitary" or even "solitary during long periods of their
life cycle"; a reader can find that detailed description by following the link to the article and looking for the explanation of the species common behavior, plus possible exceptions to it. If your point is that making it easy for interested readers to find the articles containing the detailed information (where exceptions and nuances are explained in detail) is a bad thing, I can't agree with that.
Diego (
talk)
07:56, 8 December 2013 (UTC)reply
A list that is sourced to various literature descriptions of what "solitary" means, that discusses how literature defines "solitary", and that elaborates for each animal species of interest the types of gregarious or solitary behavior they engage in with links to the article in question could indeed be useful, but as a list. As a category, we are performing original research, by suggesting that the subjective adjective "solitary" has some clear definition in the literature or that scientists are agreed upon what it means, which no-one has demonstrated yet; indeed, all sorts of different categorizations of behavior, as I noted above, are discussed in the literature, there isn't an overarching "gregarious/non-gregarious" or "solitary/non-solitary" binary divide that any literature I've found defines clearly. This is simply too nuanced and subjective to work as a category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:06, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
set categories on the other hand are making a claim through membership that the entity in question is indeed a member of the set
You're right there -
and that others, by their absence, are not
but here's where you are totally off base. You simply cannot consider meaningful the absence of an article from the category - it could be that we can't confidently assess whether it belongs, or even that it belongs to the category but no Wikipedian has managed to include the article yet. Inclusion in the category means that we can tell with confidence that the article belongs to the set; its absence only can mean that we don't have such confidence. That's why it doesn't make sense to interpret categories as mathematical binary sets - they're more of a
three-valued logic. No, the proper way to indicate that an article X is not an Y is to create an opposite category "X that are not Y" (that gives more information than the mere absence from "X that are Y").
Insisting that categories must be born
perfect would make them incredibly less useful. As you say, it would prevent us to create many categories on perfectly valid topics, just to try to follow an impossible-to-met technicality.
As a category, we are performing original research
And again, I cannot accept that the topic being valid or invalid depends on the way we decide to give format to the information within the project. The topic is valid if we include it in a list, but if we spread exactly the same information within the relevant articles it's suddenly original research? Either the topic is a valid one and can be classified with a category, or it isn't valid and it wouldn't qualify for a list article either. Now that we're at it, I haven't seen that the editors wanting to delete this category for its imprecision have jumped to fix the purported ambiguities found at
List of solitary animals. If this is so incredibly confusing to readers, how is it that you're not running to fix it a.s.a.p.?
Diego (
talk)
06:11, 10 December 2013 (UTC)reply
List of solitary animals is up next for deletion, as it's totally unsourced and doesn't have clear inclusion criteria. We need someone who has an understanding of socio-biology literature to determine the right title and inclusion criteria, but IMHO solitary is not it. In general, we have many cases where lists are acceptable while categories are not - anything which is subjectively defined can nonetheless exist as a list in certain cases, but usually not as a category. For another example, we have lists of award winners, even if we have deleted the associated categories. "Listify and delete" is a relatively frequently used suggestion here, so, no, you're wrong that if a list exists a category must as well. Again this comes down to subjectivity - you haven't brought forth, still, any literature which defines the concept of "solitary", so for now it is simply a subjective adjective used by some researchers to describe different patterns of behavior in the hugely diverse animal kingdom. As such it's a bad idea for a category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
16:35, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per Montanabw and Diego. Categories are there to help folks find articles and the concept of a solitary animal is both a biologically relevant behavior as noted above and a well-known/popular characterization of animal behavior. The fact that a category might have fuzzy boundaries is no impediment to its utility;
Category:Philosophy has fuzzy boundaries, too, but is still useful. --
Mark viking (
talk)
10:20, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Which is beyond the scope of this discussion, but you raise the point that what we are looking at here is broader than this category. So rather than waste more bandwidth here, I say keep and take your broader concerns farther up the food chain because you are looking at an issue that is probably impossible to decide on a case-by-case basis as we are doing here.
Montanabw(talk)18:18, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think it's long-standing practice that topic categories have much more flexibility in their contents, since being included in the category is simply claiming that article X is rather closely related to topic Y - set categories on the other hand are making a claim through membership that the entity in question is indeed a member of the set, and that others, by their absence, are not. There is a big difference between our criteria for inclusion in
Category:American women and
Category:Women in the United States, for example; it's a difference of a "is-a" relationship and a "is-related-to" relationship. I don't think we need a separate discussion to establish long-standing practice.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:11, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete. Despite all the arguments above in favour keeping the category, nobody has been able to provide evidence that the concept of "solitary animal" is one which can be applied consistently without
WP:OC#SUBJECTIVE assessments or
WP:OC#ARBITRARY criteria. The article
solitary animal is wholly unreferenced, so it is no help; but the article
sociality is a much better piece of work. It defines sociality as "the degree to which individuals in an animal population tend to associate in social groups"; note that word degree, which clearly conveys a scale rather than a discrete condition. That article also includes a
table of classifications, which a) doesn't use the term "solitary", and b) clearly illustrates that sociality is a variable scale rather than a set of fixed points. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:13, 17 January 2014 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Delete While some organizations may have all female staff, I see no reason to split off women in mixed gender staff areas. It is an unneeded way to split people.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:46, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per BrownHairedGirl. Absolutely nothing wrong with using this as a parent for the Columbia University category or other such categories. We can always tag it for {{db-c1}} if appropriate. However, other such categories exist; see the subcategories of
Category:Ordained Christian women, for example.
Nyttend (
talk)
02:07, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The only contents are up for deletion, so if the other cats are deleted this will be empty. The Christian women is a different issue - those are specific roles for women, and "Christian" is not really an organization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
16:29, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I said the subcats, which include organization-related things such as the abbesses. "Christian" isn't an organization, but Christianity is. Your comments seem quite irrelevant, so I'm guessing that you're making relevant comments that I've misinterpreted. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the point of the category? Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the nomination? Please help me understand your meaning better.
Nyttend (
talk)
22:42, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
No,
Christianity isn't an organization. It is a religion (actually, it describes a number of different dogmas). There's a huge difference. I think you were suggesting that
Category:Ordained Christian women may be relevant to this category, but I disagree - that category doesn't need a different parent, and in any case for religious orders there are specific roles laid out for women, which is much less the case with other types of organizations. In any case, I agree with BHG, once it's empty we should delete it.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
23:16, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Category:Navy of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale:Rename or upmerge. I figured that like most topic categories, this one should be renamed to match its corresponding main article:
Real Marina (Kingdom of the Two Sicilies). This was opposed in the speedy section (see below) based on the argument that categories for navies use purely English names. But I noted that with the exception of this one, all of the categories are named after the corresponding main article—it just so happens that usually the corresponding main article is in English! Anyway, perhaps with only a main article and a subcategory, we don't even need the category at all, in which case it could be upmerged?
Good Ol’factory(talk)20:09, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I'm not sure your sense of a convention there is necessarily accurate. It just as easily could be said that the convention is that the categories are named after the main article, which is the overriding general convention anyway.
Good Ol’factory(talk)02:32, 21 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Well, yeah—because the main articles for each uses the English name. If you look hard enough, you can find "patters" and "conventions" that seem to be based on any number of factors, but they are not necessarily the controlling one.
Good Ol’factory(talk)21:17, 22 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Oppose for the same reasons as given in the CFDS. Stating that "the reason all the other categories are in English is because the main articles are all in English and thus the convention is to follow the main article" is
WP:WIKILAWYERING; regardless of why, having one category that doesn't fit the pattern would be
ridiculous. Regardless of how the convention came about, the convention of
Category:Navies by country has become "English names". -
The BushrangerOne ping only04:09, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
oppose -- Real Marina translates as Royal Navy. The English WP should steer away from having articles with large amounts of (or titles in) foreign languages.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
17:01, 1 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Oppose. The proper way to achieve this move is a discussion on moving the article about the navy to its Italian title. When article is different from the rest, without an apparently good reason, the solution is to move the article instead of asking that its category get renamed. Remember that a category dependent on an article will be eligible for a speedy move if the article in question is moved after discussion.
Nyttend (
talk)
02:01, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Urban legends in video games
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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Nominator's rationale: urban legends are many; they are tropes, by definition almost, so much fiction would be amiss if it didn't include an urban legend here or there. I don't think this is defining. I looked at the articles for these games, and didn't find many that even mentioned "urban legend"
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:01, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Video games featuring protagonists of selectable gender
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the discussion was:no consensus, defaulted to keep. Good arguments from both sides, none of them being obviously stronger than the opponents.--
Ymblanter (
talk)
18:41, 19 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: According to the study by EEDAR (referenced here:
http://penny-arcade.com/report/article/games-with-female-heroes-dont-sell-because-publishers-dont-support-them), 45% of games in their sample included the ability to select a female protagonist, or select the gender of the protagonist.As such, I don't think this is defining. They only found a few percent with exclusively female protagonists, which is I think the figure that is more of interest. I think this category doesn't help, since it could group any game where you can choose the name of your character and pick an icon - boy or girl - to represent yourself - that to me is not what people are discussing when considering female leads. You can't choose to be someone other than Ms PacMan or Lara Croft (I don't think) - if the choice of a female lead is forced, that is a decision that has marketing implications, and the lack of such games is what causes the debate. This particular category should be deleted as not defining.
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:54, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
It's about user-created protag in single player only option, as explained in the (defining) description. There are only few such games. Also it was split from the main cat because people requested it to be subcatted. And yes, FemShep is exactly what people actually discuss, and not MS Pacman (a forgotten charakter from 3 decades ago). --
Niemti (
talk)
21:20, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
the study linked above found 45% of games allowed selection of the character's gender. The discussion about femshep may be it interesting in an article but is not enough to form the basis of categorization. Also I don't think femshep is user-created really, but that's besides the point. The point is, many many games allow you to play as a character of either gender. What is interesting is that there are many more games that only can be played as male, and very few games that can only be played as female. I don't know why you dismiss ms pacman, it's sort of a classic example and I havent forgotten it.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:56, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Lear2read: "Video games with the player-customized gender of the lead characters during the character creation process (only for the single-player oriented games featuring starting main characters)." There's no "many". Also, there's no "45" anywhere in your false source link. Learn2read2: "In all three genres, a little under 300 games gave the option of a female lead. That includes games where you can choose your gender or create your own character" and opnly the last part is any relevant (but most of it is MMOs anyway). As I said, stuff like Femshep (1,250,000 Google results for Femshep, only 228,000 for Ms Pacman despite or because being more than 2 decades older). --
Niemti (
talk)
23:44, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
please be careful with your arrogant 'learn2read' exhortations, if you read the source it is indeed 45% of sample. I'd much rather trust a source that took a random sample of games and analyzed them that take into account your own personal guesstimates of the frequency of such games.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:46, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep300 / 669 = 0.448, so 45% is fairly accurate. However I disagree with rationale as not defining. This category's intention is to identify games that are not lead gender restricted. Obi-Wan Kenobi's rationale seems to focus on a related but separate Female Leads categorization.
\ | - | / | - | \ | - | / (
talk)
02:04, 3 December 2013 (UTC)reply
no, my rationale is that anything which, when sampled, applies to 45% of games is not defining. It's also not defining because if I look at the lede for most of these games it doesn't say 'you can choose a boy or girl character'. Finally it's not defining because the literature in this space has focused on the number of games which are only male, vs the small number of games which are only female. The middle ground, where you can choose to be pacman or ms pacman, is not worth categorizing on.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:43, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Then why not categorize on games where you can customize the protagonist? There are many games where you can choose the protagonist's name, or the color of the car they drive, or their clothes, or their hairstyle, etc. Also, if this is only about designing new characters from a template, why do you mention femshep above? Again, per the research above, 45% of games in their sample allowed you to select the gender. This is not defining of the game.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:03, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per
WP:PERFECTION and
WP:PRESERVE. It's clear from the available references at articles, that reliable sources are noting and classifying different types of female characters in video games. Even if this category and the one below about non-playable female main characters would not satisfy all the letters of this or that content guideline (something that I don't agree is the case here, but even if it was), the right answer is to WP:FIXTHEPROBLEM, not to delete everything.
If we keep deleting every attempt made to address the description of the topic made by sources, the only thing we achieve is forcing the next editor to start from scratch and build a new imperfect categorization of the topic, with all the previous accumulated knowledge lost. If we instead recognize that
there is no deadline, we can use these categories as the starting point of a more refined, better classification and categorization; we will be able to build the
one step at a time, instead of requiring that it appears perfectly formed from scratch.
Diego (
talk)
23:46, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
these are not imperfect cats, they are not defining cats. You can apply perfection and preserve to any arbitrary category, so that argument carries no special currency here. You can find literature that talks about and lists games with male leads, but I also don't think we should categorize based on that. It is not the case that we should categorize on every characteristic that some literature covers somewhere, we have to appy editorial judgement. In this case, with 45% if games qualifying here as allowing gender selection, that's far too common to merit categorization accordingly.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
13:43, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You're right when you say that PRESERVE is a policy that applies always (and therefore we have to follow it unless you explicitly provide a reason why not following it would improve Wikipedia - which you didn't). Also in case of disagreement, editorial judgement is best informed by what external sources say - so, the fact that they cover the topic as a defining characteristic (namely, that
these games sell less copies) is a huge reason to keep the classification.
Diego (
talk)
19:03, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Far too detailed of a selection (Mass Effect and the impact on romance notwithstanding), the fact one can select a gender for their mane character is really too much a detail. Games that allow you to design the player's protagonist, yes, that's a good category, and it is implicit in that that the gender is one of those that can be selected (even if it is not 100% of the time). --
MASEM (
t)
21:47, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I guess forgot to say keep. But this "Games that allow you to design the player's protagonist" thing I might also agree on. --
Niemti (
talk)
11:12, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Terms of French origin
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Nominator's rationale: The current contents are all lists and the category is under a lists category. Alternatively this category could be deleted and the current content (one category) could be upmerged.
DexDor (
talk)
19:15, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Video games featuring non-playable female protagonists
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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The result of the discussion was:DELETE. The passage of time here makes closure difficult. I understand from the final comment that an editorial move has apparently already taken place (
User:Niemti's contribs list does not indicate in edit summary whether this is true or not, though), which seems reinforced by the fact this cat as of this moment contains only one article. So I think I will delete this category, but allow that if I misunderstood an old situation that we can recreate the cat. -
Splash -
tk21:39, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: While I can understand the need for a category of games where a gamer can play a female character, I don't see the need for a category of games where the antagonist (e.g the evil queen, the princess-in-need-of-help) is female, and I don't think this is defining. When people talk about gender in games, and the need to balance, I don't think they're talking about games where an army of dudes teams up to defeat an evil supercomputer with a female voice.
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
18:53, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I don't doubt that people discuss female villains; the point is, it is not the lack of female villains that is decried - it is the lack of playable female characters that women gamers (and others) can identify with that is really defining for the games in question. For example, several books and critics and articles discuss games with female sidekicks, or games with female secondary characters, or games with damsels in distress, but we aren't going to categorize on that either. I think overall we have overcategorization in these video games, and several of these categories need pruning, but starting to categorize games by the gender of non-playable characters just goes too far.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:31, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
My recollection is that several people in their comments, in that discussion and in the previous one, mentioned the criteria of playability. I think if you were to ask them, most would assume that protagonist *meant* "main character that you can play" - for example, see the following links:
Most of the articles I have read on this subject focus on this issue of protagonist as playable character. For another example, Sarkeesian's video on "Damsel in distress" discusses how a would-be protagonist was turned into a damsel-in-distress instead.
[11]
One of the most famous recent non-playable female lead characters, Yorda, is feted as a great female character, but importantly, she is NOT described as a protagonist.
Lists, such as this one, include only playable characters:
[12]
net net, I think the idea that protagonist can include non-playable characters is really an edge case, and in any case, I think the utility of categorizing games where a non-playable main character is a woman is pretty weak, as this just brings us back to the damsel-in-distress tropes. If the point of this category is to mirror the discussions happening about female protagonists, we should follow the common-sense definitions and keep it to only playable ones.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
08:04, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
@Obiwankenobi. If you think that the only non-playable main characters are the damsels in distress, you haven't looked at the contents of the category with much care. Most of those characters are not damsels in distress, and several (Galatea, Grace from Façade) are much more important to the story than the player character. Your main argument (that a different criterion exists for other category should prevent this category from existing) doesn't make any sense.
Diego (
talk)
23:35, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Diego has just changed the inclusion criteria back to include antagonists and secondary characters who are female. This only strengthens the reasoning to delete - just because one villain or one secondary character in a game is a female, how is that defining of the game? For example, in Halo, the computer who helps you has a female persona - but the whole game you're playing the master chief, who seems rather male. I don't think those decrying the lack of female protagonists had Halo in mind as a model of how to incorporate women into games. The key point made in the literature is identification of the player with the character they are playing, and the financial costs and poor market for games where there is only a female lead to play, since (presumably) the majority of male gamers don't want to play such games. But those same gamers have no problems buying Halo by the millions in spite of a female computer AI.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
00:02, 27 November 2013 (UTC)reply
I'm actually cool with changing it to simply (gender neutral) non-playable protagonists, and including the male ones, while adding those ones back to the main category for female game protagonists. Diego did the sub-cat just because it has been requested. --
Niemti (
talk)
02:01, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I would be OK too with moving it to a gender-neutral category if that is proposed, though I don't think male non-playable protagonists receive as much attention from the media as to be notable; female characters are noted precisely because of their rarity. (This makes the comparison with "films with female stars" moot, BTW - in contrast to films, there are very few games with female protagonists).
Diego (
talk)
18:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Unlike the previous category about female protagonists (Which there was agreement needed significant refinement), here, the problem is that nearly all games have a non-player protagonist - if not several - and thus this is too broad a classification. "List of video games with non-playable female companions" may have something to it, that would be your Ico, Half-Life 2, Last of Us, etc., and be far more discriminating than the case for games that just have a female character that is on the same side as the main character. --
MASEM (
t)
21:45, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You still don't understand the term
protagonist, don't you? It's nothing about any "character that is on the same side as the main character" (aka good guy) or some other nonsense from your imagination. I think I also told you this already, but I guess I need to repeat ad infinitum: the mere companions are usually
sidekicks (and sidekicks are not protagonists). There are actually far more female sidekicks than non-playable protagonists (many/most RPGs feature the sidekicks, for example), they include such notable characters like
Yuffie Kisaragi,
Cortana,
Annah-of-the-Shadows,
EVA (Metal Gear),
Lulu (Final Fantasy),
Grace Nakimura,
Midna, and more, while the only (mostly) non-playable protagonist with an article is Zelda and maybe ALSO Midna (I'm not a Legend of Zelda expert). The subject of female companions/sidekicks might be a subject for another (and much bigger) category if you wish to make one, but the purpose of this sub-categorty was to make the main category smaller, just as it was requested by somebody (Obi
just deleted this request). The other sub-category was made for the same purpose too. --
Niemti (
talk)
01:18, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
And because I really need to repeat stuff for you always, here's what a non-playable female protagonist actually is (from this very thread, which you didn't read):
Ghost in the Shell (video game) follows
Motoko Kusanagi in the story cutscenes, the male player character is just some random nameless dude shooting stuff in the gameplay sections. In
Lifeline (video game) and
The Daedalus Encounter the male player character is only helping the protagonist(s) through a live feed sort connection. (The player character is their sidekick.) In
Silent Hill: Shattered Memories the male player character from the "actual" gameplay sections was imaginary and didn't exist. --
Niemti (
talk)
01:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
"Protagonist" is meant to be a very narrow term for a work of fiction; there is almost no way that a video game can have a "non-player protagonist" since that means the player-character is not the main character. (I am not discounting there may be some, but that's going to be rare). But you're not using that definition, neither here nor on the female protagonist page, you're taking too broad a stroke. That's the problem here, you can't run these both ways. And given what the decision was on keeping the female protagonists but with the appropriate narrowing to what protagonists are supposed to be, this category will not survive. --
MASEM (
t)
02:00, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
And it indeed is a very narrow term, while you're confusing it with good guy / bad guy. Now would you click my examples from above sometimes and read the articles and gasp at these incredible marvels there? And as I told you already more than once (but I need to repeat) it is, generally, already narrowed to what protagonists are supposed be (and morever, it was always this way). In the case of this category I'm uncertain only about Zelda's role (classificiation), but that's another story (not for now and here). And yes, there are actually far more simple companions aka sidekicks than non-playable protagonists (contrary to your opinion, and again repeating myself). --
Niemti (
talk)
02:04, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
there is almost no way that a video game can have a "non-player protagonist" since that means the player-character is not the main character. See, we are in agreement; female protagonist characters in video games are rare in general, and having these particular characteristics (both "protagonist" and "non-playable") is even rarer. That's why this category contains so few games: there are really a small amount of characters belonging to the group. Therefore, the category will always be small - I can't understand your "delete" !vote on the basis that it's a broad classification, and your previous assertion that "nearly all games have a non-player protagonist" doesn't make sense. This category is intended to compile those few rare exceptions when they exist and have been noted by RSs to the point of being described in an article. We would agree that including companions and side-kicks (thus, characters "on the same side as the main character") would make the category much larger, but they're explicitly excluded by the defining topic and inclusion criteria.
Diego (
talk)
18:46, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete Mainly due to the lack of notability, and that this is going to be a huge list very quickly. I understand it's okay for huge lists on wikipedia, but I think it would easier to simply list the games that feature playable female protagonists, since it would be far more unique.
Whatever told you "this is going to be a huge list very quickly"? It's actually a small category (23 articles right now) and unlikely to get much bigger, also because it's the non-playable ones are the ones that are truly unique (in video games, the game's protagonists are usually playable, that is directly controllable by the player). And "more importantly": this is not an "article". --
Niemti (
talk)
11:38, 28 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Change to Gender Neutral No need to be touchy, although you do make some good points. I was just a little confused regarding how we classify what a protagonist is in a video game (what about antiheroes? What about Zelda? what about freeman-esque characters?). You mentioned before that a gender neutral category is a possibility, i'll go with that since you've proven to me how unique this is.
BallroomBlitzkriegBebop (
talk)
01:18, 30 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:American models by city
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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The result of the discussion was:MERGE and DELETE to the second indicated category. This appears to have happened with the passage of time since the nomination. Also, most of the original categories appear to have been deleted as creations of a banned user. The de facto outcome has been that the second of the two merge targets has been created, and all but a few originals then deleted. I will follow that pattern for the few that remain. I note that there are requests for a two-way merge, but that can always be accomplished just editorially, there is no need for a CfD to approve it at this stage. -
Splash -
tk21:27, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale:Delete with all subcategories, as overcategorization. Merge up to state-level categories, as overcategorization. This is enough of a non-defining characteristic that
WP:OC#LOCATION uses "models by city" as an example of categorization to avoid. Mbinebritalk ←13:46, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
There's no real "typically" here. We categorize by states and cities when necessary, based on relevance and the need to manage larger categories. City-based categorization fails both points. Not to mention, I'm not sure how you can make your argument when, judging from your edit history, you're having to make significant changes to numerous category trees in order fit this "typical" method of categorization in, for modeling occupation cats and beyond. Mbinebritalk ←17:09, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
There's way too many American models, it only makes sense to break it down further IMO. I'm only trying to populate cities where there's a significant number.--
Oriole85 (
talk)
18:53, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Support The parent cat is more than enough. Subcat down to municipality is drilling way too deep down into the weeds to be of use for anything but making busywork for avid categorizers.
Erictalk19:21, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Support but with procedural point. In fact, I think the intersection of models and city is a step too far. In fact a few months ago I argued we had gone too far with the intersection of city and occupation, but it was too broad for an easy CFD. In this case, to do anything we need to have individual nominations of each specific by city category involved.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
22:00, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Yeah I can get behind this, I think with NYC/LA/other large cities it's great to separate them like we do with actors. If there isn't enough material, a category shouldn't exist.--
Oriole85 (
talk)
22:27, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep until empty. I entirely agree that categorising models by city is an irrelevant intersection of occupation and location. However, this category is only a container, and so long as we have categories for each city, this container category serves an important navigational function. If anyone wants to nominate the sub-cats for upmerger, I will enthusiastically support that proposal, but until the sub-cats are deleted, this one should stay. I urge
the nominator to withdraw this nomination. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
11:13, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Merge to the relevant states. I agree that categorizing by city is over-categorizing. What will we do for models from small towns? Also, most of the categories are very small, and will probably remain too small to be useful.
Howicus(Did I mess up?)19:11, 29 November 2013 (UTC)reply
@
Howicus, I also that categorizing by city is over-categorizing. However, this nomination will not cause even one article to be re-categorised, because the articles are in sub-categories which have not been included in this nomination. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:47, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Note to closing admin. The stated intention of this nomination is to remove the models-by-city categories, and most editors in this discussion support that goal. However, before closing this CFD, please note that the proposed action will not achieve that. The effect of this nom would simply be to remove a single container category, making it harder to track down the categories which editors want upmerged. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:54, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Indeed,
Obi, and you were not alone. However, subcategories which are neither tagged nor nominated cannot be merged by this discussion, so I wanted to draw the attention of the closing admin to the fact that the discussion here has been about a proposal which is not actually on the table. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
11:45, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Not really done. Most of the categories have not been tagged, and those which have been tagged do not link properly to this section, because the anchor is missing the prefix "Category:".
Okay, you want the second merge targets in (which no one else seems concerned with), so why are you telling this person? What does it have to do with them? Or is this just a passive aggressive attempt to get my attention? Because you could, you know, go the direct route and just leave me a note on my talk page. Mbinebritalk ←20:49, 3 December 2013 (UTC)reply
@
Mbinebri:, a little
civility and an
assumption of good faith goes a long way. I was simply replying to the latest editor to support a nomination's rationale while overlooking the adverse consequences of its actual effect. A nominator may make whatever proposal they like, but other editors take responsibility for whether they support it. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
22:52, 4 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Project Catwalk (Netherlands)
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Comment Apparently, I created this category but I don't create categories for just one article. Was this category emptied? Were there more articles that were tagged with this category like show contestants or seasons? I can't figure out what happened here.
LizRead!Talk!12:55, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Comment I don't know. I didn't remove any pages from the category, and it had only page in it, when this nomination was made.
There are the edits you near the creation of this category.
ArmbrustTheHomunculus14:08, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Wow, I blew it here. I usually don't create a category unless there are at least 5 or 6 child categories/articles (and hopefully many more than that). I'm glad you caught this, this should be a speedy delete.
This was a bad call on my part and all I can think of is when I'm working categorizing a field like TV series or descent or actors or anything that looks like it needs tending, I look at the whole, largest category and work very systematically...I must have mistakenly believed there were more related articles that would go in that category when the fact is that the one article that does exist is terrible, barely a stub. I'll slow down and be more careful.
LizRead!Talk!22:47, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Bicontinental countries
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delete this is not defining for the countries in question, like many other geographical features. The list is largely sufficient and explains the context in much more detail than a binary category could.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:45, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete It still does not include France, which maybe is tri-continental if we consider all the departments. How does East Timor belong here? It is not in two continents, the only thing may be some people disagree on which continent it is in.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:52, 30 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete -- Unnecessary. The appropiate course is to categorise Russia as in Europe and in Asia. Countries with overseas departments (such as France) should not be included.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
17:07, 1 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Ghanaian Football Clubs
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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Nominator's rationale: I'm not especially experienced with categories, but I was under the impression that category redirects were supposed to be used sparingly, perhaps for common mistakes users would be likely to make. This doesn't seem to be such a redirect. --
BDD (
talk)
06:41, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
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Category:Uncle Grandpa
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Nominator's rationale: Cat has 3 pages. Series it covers is roughly new (2013). I don't see why this cartoon needs a separate category all its own.
Paper LuigiT •
C04:07, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Comment: Actually, it seems that there are only two pages in this category; the series itself and the list of episodes. That said, the spin-off series, Secret Mountain Fort Awesome and its own episode list could probably be added. How about
Peter Browngardt? Are series creators typically included in these categories? If Uncle Grandpa and Secret Mountain Fort Awesome each had character lists, then this would probably be worth keeping. As it is though, I'm sort of on the fence. I'll abstain from voting, but there probably wouldn't be any harm in deleting this for now. It can always be brought back sometime down the road, if more articles are ever created. --
Jpcase (
talk)
22:25, 10 December 2013 (UTC)reply
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Cyprus youth international footballers
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Nominator's rationale: Only the top (major) youth national teams from each country should be given it's own category and the lower youth levels grouped together. –
Michael (
talk)
02:17, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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Category:Solitary Animals
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
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The result of the discussion was:DELETE. This is an exceptionally well-argued debate, and I am glad of the great assistance it provides to a closing admin who has no expertise in the area. My delete conclusions is based on the fact that the keepers have not persuaded the weightier deleters that there is a clear-enough rule that can be followed in populating this category due to the many and varied types of behaviour a particular animal might have, which variations cannot be expressed by the category alone. It is observed that a/the list could do this job with the degree of subtlety and analysis it requires. -
Splash -
tk21:48, 26 January 2014 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale: Random and rather subjective category. Animals could be categorized by hundreds of different physical traits or behaviour, but we don't because whether an animal has brown fur, or has four legs or is solitary or gregarious is not an essential defining feature.
BabelStone (
talk)
00:15, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
It's not easy to determine what is an appropriate category, especially if you're new to Wikipedia. As a rule of thumb, if you want to create a category that will apply to dozens or hundreds of articles then think twice about it, because there is probably a good reason the category has not already been created. And if you still think it would be a good idea then it might be a good idea to raise it at the appropriate Wikipedia project (
WikiProject Animals in this case) first.
BabelStone (
talk)
19:26, 26 November 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep: There are currently 96 articles in this category. It is a subcat of
Category:Behavior, which has many articles and subcategories, so there is clearly precedent for behavior being categorized. Even if that isn't the best parent cat, there is also
Category:Group processes, and
Category:Behavioral ecology. And actually, herding or solitary behavior can be an essential defining feature, particularly for endangered species, captive breeding, or even things like potential for domestication.
Montanabw(talk)04:49, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Um, no we don't. We classify by
Tetrapod, which is a superclass within the formal biological classification system, and includes descendants of four-limbed vertebrates. Some tetrapods have lost their limbs (eg snakes). I hardly think people would say that the
Eagle has four legs, either. So, your comment is misplaced and inaccurate.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:01, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
An eagle has four limbs, though. What this shows is that if you stay with the scientific terms used in biology definitions, all those doubts about the ambiguity of the common words disappear, and you can have perfectly defined categories. If you insist in using the plain meaning of the word of course it will introduce uncertainty - but that doesn't mean that the category is badly defined, only that you're using it wrong.
Diego (
talk)
08:03, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
But a snake doesn't, and a snake is a tetrapod. That to me demonstrates that a biological classification based on a well-established category tree is reasonable, but 4-legged or 4-limbed animals would not be.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
10:21, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
comment ultimately, this is a classic example where categories don't work, but lists may. there are many overlapping definitions for sociality in animals - for example, to what extent to they exhibit gregarious behavior, which is different than being social, and then different types of being social, such as
Eusociality,
Presociality,
Subsociality, etc. But I don't think we should start a socio-biology categorization system here - there is simply no clear divide between "solitary" and "non-solitary" animals - as some animal are solitary for part of their lives, and social for others; other times, some animals of the same species will be found in groups while others will be solitary. Lists can capture such nuance, but categorization - esp set categorization, should be relatively black and white, and I don't think there are black and white boundaries here.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:48, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
That's a classic
WP:NOTDUP argument - that a list may exist doesn't mean that a similar category shouldn't. If an animal species are solitary during part of their lives and sometimes lives in groups, you can include it in both categories - you don't need to draw a divide line, as categories are not disjunctive; what matters is how biologists have classified it. If an animal is of difficult or impossible categorization under this category because it's not a defining trait for that species, it will not have been included in either group by biologists, so that difficulty shouldn't blurry the category (if we were thwarted by such problems, we wouldn't have categories at all).
Diego (
talk)
20:04, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
No, that's not what I said. I didn't say "a list exists, therefore we don't need a category" - instead I made the argument that this is one of those cases, and we have many, where lists are appropriate but categories are not. The reason is that I haven't found reliable sources that have a consensus-agreed-upon categorization of "solitary" animals, and what this means exactly. It's true, some scientific papers will call animal X solitary, but then you can find a scientific paper on the same animal talking about it's social behavior traits. They will also say things like "This animal is relatively asocial" - what does that mean? How can we categorize based on that? Finally, different species of the same order or genus can exhibit different social behavior - for example, you added Octopus, but at least one species of Octopus is *not* solitary: [
[14]]. By categorizing them, we are basically saying "All octopus are asocial/solitary/whatever", even if that's not the case. If we had a list, we could say "The Octopus is often considered a solitary animal, meeting with its mate only to reproduce, but they exhibit hierarchical social behavior in laboratory conditions and in constrained environments, and there are several species that live in groups" - you can't say all that in a category. OTOH, claiming a species uses tools is just that - a claim that some members of a species have been seen to use tools. Please show me these biologist-agreed-upon categorizations of levels of animal social interaction, with membership lists by species. My guess is, you won't find it. Ultimately, solitary is a subjective/descriptive term, and it may well be true that most octopii are relatively solitary, but exceptions are bad for categorization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
20:23, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
You don't need to say "The Octopus is often considered a solitary animal, meeting with its mate only to reproduce...". You can say that in the Octopus article, and link that article from the category so that interested readers can find it. Wikipedia categories are primarily navigational devices, not computational ontologies. Claiming that articles in a category must exhibit binary true-false properties is a red herring (as well as your false dichotomy implying that a solitary animal can't have social traits) - all we need is that the topics of those articles are verifiably members of a general class as defined by the sources. We are not doing math here, but categorizing information for later retrieval.
Diego (
talk)
20:53, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think you misunderstand categorization then. For set categories, at least, entries should exhibit such true-false properties, because membership itself is binary; categories which are at risk of more subjective criteria are frequently brought here to be killed off. Please read
Wikipedia:OCAT#SUBJECTIVE - "Solitary" is a good example of such a subjective adjective. It's not clear from any sources I've seen how much solitary behavior an animal must exhibit, and at what points in its life, and whether both males and females need to exhibit this behavior to merit the category of "solitary". Yes, wikipedia categories are navigational in nature, but they are also not supposed to be subjective, which this one is, that's the bottom line. What exactly will establish that an octopus is a solitary animal per RS? 10 papers calling them solitary? Is the Octopus' form of solitary/asocial behavior similar to the asocial/solitary behavior of the bear or the leopard - e.g. are there common characteristics which define "solitary"? What about
Eledone, a whole genus of octopus considered "social", or Octopus joubini, O. briareus, O. bimaculoides which live in high densities? At what point are there enough exceptions to the general "solitary" behavior pattern such that Octopus no longer qualifies as "solitary"? Again, please bring me the sources that define the consensus view of what "solitary" means, and then which place species into this continuum. Additionally, given that you want to categorize based on subjective adjectives, shall we also start to categorize social animals as well? There is a vast literature on this topic. To give you a flavor, here is a chapter on the social behavior of octopi
[15] - note how the author describes several different types of behavior that exhibit social or asocial traits, such as avoidance or tolerance of conspecifics, toleration of crowding, formation of size-based dominance relationships, territoriality, clumping aggregations, or young
Octopus rubescens forming
shoals off the coast of California. When you sum all this up, you basically get "Octopi are generally asocial, but they have lots of complex social interactions when living close together, and there are several exceptions, including some species which group in shoals". That's not a good basis for categorization.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
21:18, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Oh, I see. I disagree with you, therefore I don't understand Wikipedia? Under your criterion we couldn't have categories for
Category:Skyscrapers (when does one building start being "tall"?) or
Category:Edible plants (whether something is "edible" is subject to much more uncertainty than whether an animal lives in herds. Does "wood" count as edible even if it can't be digested? There are people with allergy to nuts! are those edible?). The criterion for defining categories has always been whether we can
verify the inclusion of the item in the category, not that the category itself is binary.
All those complexities you introduce are up to biologists to assess, not Wikipedians. If a species has been classified as nongregarious (the precise term, not the informal adjective), of course that creates a well defined classification. Your arguments at most amount for a renaming to
Category:Nongregarious animals, not for deletion.
Diego (
talk)
08:22, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Nongregarious animals are not the same as solitary animals. Again, if you want to make an argument to keep, you need to bring some sources that define these terms clearly, and classify animals accordingly. When I looked at some literature on nongregarious animals, it had phrases like "relatively nongregarious", showing that this is also not a black and white categorization, but rather a qualitative assessment of the degree of social interaction they regularly exhibit. As for skyskrapers, there are institutes which have more precise definitions of tall buildings, and it would be reasonable to recategorize based on these more solid definitions vs the vague skyskrapers which doesn't have a firm definition. As for edible, I don't think there's as much uncertainty as you note. In any case, edibility is simpler to determine than the collection of different social behaviors which make an animal gregarious/social/asocial/solitary, because these behaviors vary over time, across species, across geographies, and with different ecological circumstances, whereas a given species of plant will almost always either be edible, or not. You are right that at the end of the day, perhaps we don't always achieve pure black/white, but I do think we should get as close as we can, and in this particular case my judgement and the judgement of others !voting is that this categorization falls too close to subjectivity.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
10:21, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete. -- Solitary vs social behavior is matter of relative degrees and circumstances, not a neat yes/no box that animals can be sorted into. If we ever did want to group animals together by some behavior, that information needs to be in a list with proper citations and annotations to reflect the complexity of nature. --
Yzx (
talk)
20:54, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete per Obi and Yzx. There may be some animals that clearly fit the definition of a
solitary animal (and some that clearly don't), but there are also animals that may, for example, hunt alone and then return to a group. Unless there is an intent to categorize all/most animals by their (non)solitary status we shouldn't categorize just a tiny fraction of the total species by this characteristic. The article at
Solitary animal is short and unreferenced (compare, for example, with
Predation) which suggests that this is not a good characteristic for categorization (if there aren't sufficient editors with the knowledge/interest to improve that article then I doubt there are the editors needed to fully populate/maintain a category tree based on that characteristic). Any new categorization scheme that could include thousands of articles should not be created without a clear consensus at the relevant wikiproject(s).
DexDor (
talk)
21:38, 5 December 2013 (UTC)reply
WP:ATA (which, by thee way, is an essay) is primarily about articles. Some parts of it may (also) be applicable to categories, but some parts are really only applicable to articles.
WP:UGLY etc say we shouldn't delete an article just because it's poor quality (e.g. incomplete or messy). Such an article may not do much harm (e.g. it may have few inlinks and may have cleanup tags warning readers) and, most importantly, it may contain cited encyclopedic information which would be lost from WP if the article is deleted. The costs/benefits of a category can not be assessed in exactly the same way.
DexDor (
talk)
20:25, 7 December 2013 (UTC)reply
That doesn't make any more valid your argument that a new category should be created in a perfect state and only after requesting permission in the form of previous consensus, and still doesn't answer the ultimate question: how in your opinion does deleting this category improve Wikipedia?
Diego (
talk)
22:52, 7 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Because it elevates to the level of "in-out" the notion of "solitary" animals, which is nonetheless subjective; it's bad for wikipedia because it's misleading to users. I've given copious examples above that your addition of
Octopus to the category is problematic, because while often described as such, there are species of octopus and circumstances under which the octopus is anything but solitary. I would expect that many other animals would have similar cases. "Solitary" is a fuzzy topic - how solitary must an animal be before it gets in this category? What if the males are solitary, but the females are gregarious? Attempting to categorize a whole package of behaviors and defining inclusion criteria for in/out makes this the very essence of a subjective category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
00:16, 8 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Ah, it surfaces what bothers you - let's turn it into actionable information. See, that potential problem you identify doesn't mean that be should delete the whole thing, as it can be dealt with. Don't you see that you're
projecting your own assumptions onto the general readership? The category would only be confusing to those readers who share the same preconception that the category would describe a binary black/white property of the animals included (and would be useful to any other reader). However, it only takes that we
describe the inclusion criteria in the category page in order to dispel those preconceptions and making clear how readers should interpret the inclusion of a species in the category, thus avoiding the possible confusion you describe.
For cases like for example the
oceanic whitetip shark, described by a reliable source as
primarily solitary, (but) observed in "feeding frenzies" when a food source is present. Such exceptions merit a detailed discussion of each unclear entry on a case-by-case basis, but they don't invalidate the validity of the topic for species clearly described as "solitary", "primarily solitary" or even "solitary during long periods of their
life cycle"; a reader can find that detailed description by following the link to the article and looking for the explanation of the species common behavior, plus possible exceptions to it. If your point is that making it easy for interested readers to find the articles containing the detailed information (where exceptions and nuances are explained in detail) is a bad thing, I can't agree with that.
Diego (
talk)
07:56, 8 December 2013 (UTC)reply
A list that is sourced to various literature descriptions of what "solitary" means, that discusses how literature defines "solitary", and that elaborates for each animal species of interest the types of gregarious or solitary behavior they engage in with links to the article in question could indeed be useful, but as a list. As a category, we are performing original research, by suggesting that the subjective adjective "solitary" has some clear definition in the literature or that scientists are agreed upon what it means, which no-one has demonstrated yet; indeed, all sorts of different categorizations of behavior, as I noted above, are discussed in the literature, there isn't an overarching "gregarious/non-gregarious" or "solitary/non-solitary" binary divide that any literature I've found defines clearly. This is simply too nuanced and subjective to work as a category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:06, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
set categories on the other hand are making a claim through membership that the entity in question is indeed a member of the set
You're right there -
and that others, by their absence, are not
but here's where you are totally off base. You simply cannot consider meaningful the absence of an article from the category - it could be that we can't confidently assess whether it belongs, or even that it belongs to the category but no Wikipedian has managed to include the article yet. Inclusion in the category means that we can tell with confidence that the article belongs to the set; its absence only can mean that we don't have such confidence. That's why it doesn't make sense to interpret categories as mathematical binary sets - they're more of a
three-valued logic. No, the proper way to indicate that an article X is not an Y is to create an opposite category "X that are not Y" (that gives more information than the mere absence from "X that are Y").
Insisting that categories must be born
perfect would make them incredibly less useful. As you say, it would prevent us to create many categories on perfectly valid topics, just to try to follow an impossible-to-met technicality.
As a category, we are performing original research
And again, I cannot accept that the topic being valid or invalid depends on the way we decide to give format to the information within the project. The topic is valid if we include it in a list, but if we spread exactly the same information within the relevant articles it's suddenly original research? Either the topic is a valid one and can be classified with a category, or it isn't valid and it wouldn't qualify for a list article either. Now that we're at it, I haven't seen that the editors wanting to delete this category for its imprecision have jumped to fix the purported ambiguities found at
List of solitary animals. If this is so incredibly confusing to readers, how is it that you're not running to fix it a.s.a.p.?
Diego (
talk)
06:11, 10 December 2013 (UTC)reply
List of solitary animals is up next for deletion, as it's totally unsourced and doesn't have clear inclusion criteria. We need someone who has an understanding of socio-biology literature to determine the right title and inclusion criteria, but IMHO solitary is not it. In general, we have many cases where lists are acceptable while categories are not - anything which is subjectively defined can nonetheless exist as a list in certain cases, but usually not as a category. For another example, we have lists of award winners, even if we have deleted the associated categories. "Listify and delete" is a relatively frequently used suggestion here, so, no, you're wrong that if a list exists a category must as well. Again this comes down to subjectivity - you haven't brought forth, still, any literature which defines the concept of "solitary", so for now it is simply a subjective adjective used by some researchers to describe different patterns of behavior in the hugely diverse animal kingdom. As such it's a bad idea for a category.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
16:35, 11 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Keep per Montanabw and Diego. Categories are there to help folks find articles and the concept of a solitary animal is both a biologically relevant behavior as noted above and a well-known/popular characterization of animal behavior. The fact that a category might have fuzzy boundaries is no impediment to its utility;
Category:Philosophy has fuzzy boundaries, too, but is still useful. --
Mark viking (
talk)
10:20, 6 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Which is beyond the scope of this discussion, but you raise the point that what we are looking at here is broader than this category. So rather than waste more bandwidth here, I say keep and take your broader concerns farther up the food chain because you are looking at an issue that is probably impossible to decide on a case-by-case basis as we are doing here.
Montanabw(talk)18:18, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think it's long-standing practice that topic categories have much more flexibility in their contents, since being included in the category is simply claiming that article X is rather closely related to topic Y - set categories on the other hand are making a claim through membership that the entity in question is indeed a member of the set, and that others, by their absence, are not. There is a big difference between our criteria for inclusion in
Category:American women and
Category:Women in the United States, for example; it's a difference of a "is-a" relationship and a "is-related-to" relationship. I don't think we need a separate discussion to establish long-standing practice.--
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
talk)
19:11, 9 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Delete. Despite all the arguments above in favour keeping the category, nobody has been able to provide evidence that the concept of "solitary animal" is one which can be applied consistently without
WP:OC#SUBJECTIVE assessments or
WP:OC#ARBITRARY criteria. The article
solitary animal is wholly unreferenced, so it is no help; but the article
sociality is a much better piece of work. It defines sociality as "the degree to which individuals in an animal population tend to associate in social groups"; note that word degree, which clearly conveys a scale rather than a discrete condition. That article also includes a
table of classifications, which a) doesn't use the term "solitary", and b) clearly illustrates that sociality is a variable scale rather than a set of fixed points. --
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
02:13, 17 January 2014 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.