This is an
essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of
Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been
thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
Wikipedia editing decisions are made by weighing multiple considerations. Most policies and guidelines are written with "soft" wording to guide, rather than dictate, a result. This facilitates the application of a policy or guideline as only one of the many factors influencing the outcome.
This is best introduced by a simple common case....decision made by a single editor with only 2 potential outcomes, and the ideal situation where the editor is guided solely by Wikipedia's objectives, policies and guidelines. The process can be visualized as a scale where these main considerations are weighed and weighted and put on the two sides and the seeing which way it tips:
Moving to decisions by larger numbers of editors simply adds more people making the same decisions, (often after trying to influence the others) and combining their results with certain elements of the process defined by policies such as WP:Consensus. More complexities arise when decision process has other biases or flaws. Wikipedia has mechanisms that help in these situations, especially by involving more persons.
It is rare that a decision is dictated by only one consideration such as one policy or guideline. For that to happen, the one policy statement would need to be clear cut, categorical (without qualifiers), of highest authority in the Wikipedia hierarchy, and so clearly applicable to the question at hand that no interpretation for the particular situation is required.
The most common action of a policy or guideline is to influence the result, not dictate the result.
This concept resolves apparent conflicts between Wikipedia's goals, policies and guidelines.
This is an
essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of
Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been
thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
Wikipedia editing decisions are made by weighing multiple considerations. Most policies and guidelines are written with "soft" wording to guide, rather than dictate, a result. This facilitates the application of a policy or guideline as only one of the many factors influencing the outcome.
This is best introduced by a simple common case....decision made by a single editor with only 2 potential outcomes, and the ideal situation where the editor is guided solely by Wikipedia's objectives, policies and guidelines. The process can be visualized as a scale where these main considerations are weighed and weighted and put on the two sides and the seeing which way it tips:
Moving to decisions by larger numbers of editors simply adds more people making the same decisions, (often after trying to influence the others) and combining their results with certain elements of the process defined by policies such as WP:Consensus. More complexities arise when decision process has other biases or flaws. Wikipedia has mechanisms that help in these situations, especially by involving more persons.
It is rare that a decision is dictated by only one consideration such as one policy or guideline. For that to happen, the one policy statement would need to be clear cut, categorical (without qualifiers), of highest authority in the Wikipedia hierarchy, and so clearly applicable to the question at hand that no interpretation for the particular situation is required.
The most common action of a policy or guideline is to influence the result, not dictate the result.
This concept resolves apparent conflicts between Wikipedia's goals, policies and guidelines.