This is anessay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one ofWikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not beenthoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
| This page in a nutshell: We arehere to build an encyclopedia, notrefute pseudoscience. |
Wikipedia is notRationalWiki.[1]RationalWiki differs in several ways from the philosophy of Wikipedia and some other informational wikis. It is written from a self-described "snarky point of view" and "scientific point of view" (both abbreviated as SPOV) rather than a "neutral point of view" (NPOV), and publishes opinion, speculation, and original research.
[2] We, on the other hand, are primarily concerned withbuilding an encyclopedia and not with disprovingpseudoscience, theparanormal,alternative medicine,urban legends,religion, oranything else for that matter. Even withgood intentions, the latter can sometimes run contrary to the former.
Wikipedia fortunately has its own answer to thedemarcation problem. Pseudoscience isnonsense claiming to be scientific
,[3] ortheories which, while purporting to be scientific, are obviously bogus
,[4] or theoriespresented by proponents as science but characteristically fail to adhere to scientific standards and methods
.[5] Pseudoscience is not a synonym forfalse, or even forunscientific.[6]
There is a vast body of critical and decolonial scholarship that offers much broader perspectives than those that are presently available on Wikipedia. These peer-reviewed studies provide reliable sources that are relatively easy to incorporate into the encyclopedia and have enormous potential for countering systemic bias.
While mainstream subjects are based on numerous excellent sources and tend to receive favorable treatment here, there are editors whose legitimate skepticism towards fringe subjects tends to make them deal improperly with the subjects, even to the point of censoring and deleting them.
analyze and refute pseudoscience and the anti-science movement, document 'crank' ideas, explore conspiracy theories, authoritarianism, and fundamentalism, and analyze how these subjects are handled in the media.
All non-science is not pseudoscience, and science has non-trivial borders to other non-scientific phenomena, such as metaphysics, religion, and various types of non-scientific systematized knowledge.
Some people believe the Holocaust never happened (and even offer “proof”)is offered as to why
telling the truth about Santa is important.