CZ:Requested Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Bruce M. Tindall (→P) |
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* [[political spectrum]] - requested by [[User:Matthew Cornell Woods, Jr.|Matthew Woods]] | * [[political spectrum]] - requested by [[User:Matthew Cornell Woods, Jr.|Matthew Woods]] | ||
: Besides giving examples of other spectrums out there, I propose that we order political beliefs into a three-axis table based on the following properties: economic freedom, political freedom, and social freedom. I'd also like to see tables where variants of the same belief are compared to each other. | : Besides giving examples of other spectrums out there, I propose that we order political beliefs into a three-axis table based on the following properties: economic freedom, political freedom, and social freedom. I'd also like to see tables where variants of the same belief are compared to each other. | ||
: | |||
: Response from [[User:Bruce M.Tindall|Bruce M.Tindall]] 18:06, 21 November 2007 (CST): Ah, but it might be difficult to do so in an objective way. One person's "high degree of economic freedom" is another person's "low degree of social justice"; "high social freedom" might be described as "low social order" or "low public safety" by someone else. The choice and naming of the axes for such a scheme right away implies a system and hierarchy of values. There's also the question of which axes are left out: is there a dimension for measuring, say, the relative powers or duties belonging to different groupings of people (individuals, families, "races," nation-states and their political subdivisions, genders, voluntary organizations, etc.)? After all, in the U.S., the 50 states have considerable sovereignty in certain areas; in other countries, power is more centralized; so there's yet another dimension of the political spectrum (probably not describable as any kind of "freedom") right there. | |||
* [[product design]] - requested by [[User:Beano Lee|Beano Lee]] | * [[product design]] - requested by [[User:Beano Lee|Beano Lee]] | ||
* [[Charles Stewart Parnell]] - Requested by [[User:Denis Cavanagh|Denis Cavanagh]] | * [[Charles Stewart Parnell]] - Requested by [[User:Denis Cavanagh|Denis Cavanagh]] |
Revision as of 18:06, 21 November 2007
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|width=10% align=center style="background:#F5F5F5"| |} Would you like the Citizendium to write an article about something? Please request it here.
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A
- Affect (psychology)
- Abortion - requested by Yi Zhe Wu
B
- Bayes' Theorem - requested by Matthew Woods
C
- commissioning and decommissioning ships - requested by Larry Sanger
G
- globalization - requested by Stephen Ewen
J
- Jimbo Wales - requested by Matthew Woods (Isn't his name Jimmy or James? --Robert W King 12:10, 16 October 2007 (CDT))
K
- Khmer Rouge - requested by Matthew Woods
M
- Michael Moore - requested by Matthew Woods
N
- Norman Borlaug - requested by Matthew Woods
O
- open source licenses (GPL, LGPL, BSD, Mozilla, etc.) - requested by Greg Woodhouse
P
- philately - requested by Julian Halé
- political spectrum - requested by Matthew Woods
- Besides giving examples of other spectrums out there, I propose that we order political beliefs into a three-axis table based on the following properties: economic freedom, political freedom, and social freedom. I'd also like to see tables where variants of the same belief are compared to each other.
- Response from Bruce M.Tindall 18:06, 21 November 2007 (CST): Ah, but it might be difficult to do so in an objective way. One person's "high degree of economic freedom" is another person's "low degree of social justice"; "high social freedom" might be described as "low social order" or "low public safety" by someone else. The choice and naming of the axes for such a scheme right away implies a system and hierarchy of values. There's also the question of which axes are left out: is there a dimension for measuring, say, the relative powers or duties belonging to different groupings of people (individuals, families, "races," nation-states and their political subdivisions, genders, voluntary organizations, etc.)? After all, in the U.S., the 50 states have considerable sovereignty in certain areas; in other countries, power is more centralized; so there's yet another dimension of the political spectrum (probably not describable as any kind of "freedom") right there.
- product design - requested by Beano Lee
- Charles Stewart Parnell - Requested by Denis Cavanagh
Q
- quantum computing - requested by Matthew Woods
S
- shin splints - requested by Mike Johnson
- Sony - requested by Beano Lee
- substantive due process - requested by Yi Zhe Wu
- Shorin-ryu Shido-kan
- sucrochemicals - requested by Matthew Woods
T
- trope - requested by Matthew Woods - which sense?
U
- utilitarianism - requested by Matthew Woods
W
- The Wisdom of Crowds (book) - requested by Larry Sanger
Z
- zero - requested by Matthew Woods
- Zionism - requested by Matthew Woods