CZ:Requested Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Tom Morris (removed ship commissioning/decommissioning - edit conflict with HCB) |
imported>Tom Morris mNo edit summary |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
* [[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. | *: 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. | ||
* [[Pope Benedict XVI]] - requested by [[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]], 2009-08-30 | * [[Pope Benedict XVI]] - requested by [[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]], 2009-08-30 |
Revision as of 12:00, 11 November 2009
Would you like the Citizendium to write an article about something? Please request it here. Add it to the top of the current monthly list and then sign it by typing --~~~~.
Requests that have been fulfilled have been moved to Fulfilled Article Requests.
For top-priority articles requested by the entire community see Core Articles.
2009
November
- Jamaica --Tom Morris 17:51, 11 November 2009 (UTC)
Older Requests
- Affect (psychology)
- open source licenses (GPL, LGPL, BSD, Mozilla, etc.) - requested by Greg Woodhouse
- 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.
- Pope Benedict XVI - requested by Tom Morris, 2009-08-30
- product design - requested by Beano Lee
- Charles Stewart Parnell - Requested by Denis Cavanagh
- 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
- trope - requested by Matthew Woods - which sense?
- UFO - requested by Larry Sanger, a timely topic given recent Stephenville, Texas UFO reports
- The Wisdom of Crowds (book) - requested by Larry Sanger
Citizendium Initiatives | ||
---|---|---|
Eduzendium | Featured Article | Recruitment | Subpages | Core Articles | Uncategorized pages | Requested Articles | Feedback Requests | Wanted Articles |
|width=10% align=center style="background:#F5F5F5"| |}