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visits member for 3 years, 11 months
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Apr
9
awarded  Pundit
Feb
12
comment How widespread is the “back it up” principle?
... Much better is a different existing option: (e.g.) We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer: please explain why you're recommending it as a solution. Answers that don't explain anything will be deleted. See Good Subjective, Bad Subjective for more information.
Feb
12
comment How widespread is the “back it up” principle?
Aha! Your quarrel is with the use of part of the post notice feature, which allows a mod to append a prefab notice from a menu to an answer. One of the choices is This post does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed., (e.g.) which I agree with you makes less sense on most of SE than it does on WP or Skeptics.SE. It should be reworded or not used. ...
Feb
12
comment How widespread is the “back it up” principle?
As I understand it, "Back it up" includes personal experience, cited as such, as a worthwhile source. What's the principle comes to exclude is theorizing or asserting without even a claim of basis in fact, e.g. "I don't think anyone's really going to like that attraction." or "Cabbies don't carry any change." without support.
Jan
24
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@Manishearth, it doesn't matter what Jeff or anyone else means by "practical." What matters is how it will be interpreted by new users.
Jan
22
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@JeffAtwood, this is an exercise in instruction, not technical specification. We should do our best to make the point we want to make as clearly and accurately as possible to the target audience, which is new users in a wide range of disciplines.
Jan
22
awarded  Yearling
Jan
22
awarded  Nice Answer
Jan
22
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
Do the following questions have practical applications? linguistics.stackexchange.com/q/127/238 linguistics.stackexchange.com/q/663/238 linguistics.stackexchange.com/q/315/238 In any case, given that many SE communities invite questions that are inherently not practical, I think the term is misleading in a gatekeeping statement to new users.
Jan
22
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
Given that we're trying to come up with phrasing that works universally, all of the above. I expect that it's more of an issue on Linguisitcs.
Jan
22
awarded  Citizen Patrol
Jan
22
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
Does "practical," in your view, intuitively characterize the language questions you're describing?
Jan
22
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@DoubleAA, I think it's optimistic to expect many readers to click through to the commentarie. It's important to pick a wording that will be closest to what you're actually looking for in the minds of most readers.
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@BenBrocka, I think it's more useful to require that questions be written from the point-of-view of genuine curiosity, which can be detected, if not necessarily objectively quantified, in the question. What matters is not the actual life or state-of-mind of the author but rather the quality of the question.
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@Rachel, I still think "practical" is misleading. On Physics.SE, it might be taken to mean "experimental/applied only; no pure theory." On Judaism.SE, it might be taken to mean "practice only; no text interpretation." In both of these cases, it looks like you're excluding whole areas of study with canons from which to derive objective answers.
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
While it's possible to come up with an interpretation of the word "practical" that includes anything you want an objective answer to, I think that its most obvious meaning excludes anything purely theoretical or intellectual, and that it's therefore misleading in a rule of thumb presented in a FAQ.
Jan
21
revised Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
"explanation" = objective
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@Manishearth, not always :)
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@random, The SE brand, as it exists today, was born in May 2010. The first theoretical discipline's site to launch under that brand went into public beta in July 2010 and was launched in October 2010. I'd say that horse left the stable shortly after the stable was built.
Jan
21
comment Is there a rule of thumb for objective questions asked out of curiosity?
@Rachel, et al., I've replaced "deserve" with "you want," which is more parallel with the original "problems you face."