User:Hansmuller - Wikipedia


Article Images
My alternate page JMMuller My page on the Dutch Wikipedia on the Italian Wikipedia on Commons Talk page

Hello there, thanks for visiting my page. I am a physicist/astronomer/applied mathematician/archivist/teacher living in Utrecht, The Netherlands. My interests include science, history, anthropology, art and languages. I am also lucky enough to be a Wikipedian in Residence at the African Studies Centre Leiden, Leiden University, the Netherlands.[1][2][3][4]

  • Your remarks, including suggestions and criticisms are welcome on the Talk page (please click the Talk button on high).

Some activities on Wikipedia

edit

On the English-language Wikipedia I started years ago to work on, for instance:

Hansmuller = JMMuller

edit

Reader,
I User:JMMuller wrote this and I confess: I am also on the Dutch Wikipedia as Gebruiker:Hansmuller.
However in auld lang syne, when the world and w'pedia were still young and green, the corresponding English language username was occupied and I had to register here as JMMuller. When I work on more w'pedia's sometimes confusion arises: I humbly beg your kind forgiveness.
So Reader, now you KNOW.

(Is this a fair imitation of Charlotte Brontë/J. R. R. Tolkien :-) ?)

"The sum of all knowledge"

edit

Non-native English speakers, at least in the Netherlands, take this erroneously to mean a summation ! of all knowledge, contrary to the intention of Jimmy Wales. Please refer to

Five pillars plus one?

edit

Here at Wikipedia we cherish some fundamental principles, the so-called Wikipedia:Five Pillars. However, what is the purpose of Wikipedia? There the Pillars are silent. The Bylaws of the Wikimedia Foundation might help us out, so that we could jokingly formulate yet another Pillar. If you like, you could take a look at

Bibliothecariorum leges tres

edit

Bibliothecariorum leges in rebus Vicimediae quoque culturae generalis sunt tres:

  • Lex I - In cura artis et scientiae licet audere numquam.
  • Lex II - Quod si quis non accipit responsum ad quaestionem, post duas hebdomades oportet iterare quaestionem.
  • Lex III - Rectum esse non aequalis est justificari.

(Free translation from the original first century BC? somewhat pedantic Latin: There are three librarians' laws on Wikimedia and also culture in general:

  • First Law - For the sake of art and science boldness is sometimes allowed.
  • Second Law - If one does not receive an answer to a query, one should repeat the query after two weeks / send a reminder after two weeks.
  • Third Law - Being right is not the same as being put in the right.)

Although i might not support conservative Edmund Burke's thoughts in general, i like his following upbeat quote, perhaps relevant to Wikipedia, from A vindication of Natural Society (1756):

There is a most absurd and audacious Method of reasoning avowed by some Bigots and Enthousiasts, and though Fear asserted to by some wiser and better Men; it is this. They argue against a fair Discussion of popular Prejudices, because, say they, tho' they would be found without any reasonable Support, yet the discovery might be productive of the most dangerous Consequences.
Absurd and blasphemous Notion!
As if all Happiness was not connected with the Practice of Virtue, which necessarily depends upon the Knowledge of Truth.

(quoted in Herrnstein & Murray: The Bell curve, The Free Press 1994, N.Y.)

A well regulated Wikipedia, being necessary to the education of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear two Arms, two Hands and ten Fingers for typing, shall not be infringed.

(Are non-Americans allowed this joke?)

Daily we learn a lot at Wikipedias in many languages, we make mistakes but generally progress steadily, or at least somewhat. But on occasion there inevitably are snafus and doubts:

An animal fun fable and satire about myself as a Wikipedia buff in the Dutch tradition starting with Van den vos Reynaerde (around 1250), here using Swahili proverbs. And ... about my colleagues.

Some car mathematical physics

edit

Devil's Guide To Wikipedia

edit

The obvious pleasure of destruction is rampant among some aggressive Wikipedians.
How can we delete any text or image in the most cruel way?
Well, you can:

  • Start a discussion about an article without giving time to respond, then quickly
  • Alternatively propose deletion by Wikipedia:Proposed deletion, and inappropriately maintain the proposal when contested
  • Propose a destructive merger with a related article but with a different scope
  • Bring up irrelevant arguments for distraction
  • Call anything you don't happen to like OR, meaning Original Research, even when there are plenty of references.
  • Delete a valuable well-researched paragraph or image outright, with comment "Not encyclopedic", or even only "?". (Yes, it happens.)
  • Write your own (auto)biographical Wikipedia article using sockpuppets and become an admin (or in reverse order).
  • On Wikimedia Commons as a VTRS official refuse to acknowledge the legal permission by a donor, so that a new valuable upload is deleted in time automatically in the end.
  • As an admin, block a user for a frivolous reason without a hearing, attack the user page. Then become a member of the Arbitration Committee, and refuse to discuss your own blocking action and maintain the block (nl.wikipedia).
  • Become an admin on multiple Wikimedia websites and transport your unreasonable vindictiveness for some reason to those websites (nl.wikipedia etc.).
  • As a Wikimedia local Chapter, abuse homemade Safe Space rules to frivolously exclude and discriminate against Wikipedians, in violation of the local national Constitution.
  • Bully and then complain to WMF Trust & Safety about a protest: they can issue an (inappropriate) warning to a victim of bullying ;-)
  • .... (more to come ;-) However,

All sinners and bottomline

edit

  • We are all sinners, and You can be a devil too!
  • On a positive note: Obviously, the bottom line of Wikipedia is still positive with many excellent texts and images surviving the onslaught.
  • But ... dictatorships like Russia and China also are rather productive in the field of knowledge (STEM, Science Technology Engineering & Math.). Oh, we Wikipedians can be so irritatingly critical...

Criticism of Wikipedia

edit

Test your knowledge of African Icons

edit

  • Do you know who the African Icons below are, a selection made by BBC World Service's Focus on Africa Magazine in 2010?[5]

1. Chinua Achebe; 2. Akon; 3. Kofi Annan; 4. Nnamdi Azikiwe; 5. Abubakar Tafawa Balewa; 6. Hastings Banda; 7. Steve Biko; 8. Amilcar Cabral; 9. Agbani Darego; 10. FW de Klerk; 11. Lucky Dube; 12. Cesaria Evora; 13. John Garang; 14. Haile Gebrselassie; 15. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf; 16. Nwankwo Kanu; 17. Kenneth Kaunda; 18. Salif Keita; 19. Jomo Kenyatta; 20. Angelique Kidjo; 21. John Kufuor; 22. Patrice Lumumba; 23. Baaba Maal; 24. Wangari Maathai; 25. Samora Machel; 26. Miriam Makeba; 27. Franco Luambo Makiadi aka Franco; 28. Nelson Mandela; 29. Winnie Madikizela-Mandela; 30. Hugh Masekela; 31. Roger Milla; 32. Oliver Mtukudzi; 33. Youssou N'Dour; 34. Gamal Abdel Nasser; 35. Kwame Nkrumah; 36. Julius Nyerere; 37. Abedi Pele; 38. Jerry Rawlings; 39. Thomas Sankara; 40. Ken Saro-Wiwa; 41. Haile Selassie; 42. Ousmane Sembene; 43. Leopold Senghor; 44. Wole Soyinka; 45. William R. Tolbert; 46. Ahmed Sekou Toure; 47. Ali Farka Toure; 48. Desmond Tutu; 49. Ngugi wa Thiong'o; 50. George Weah

  1. ^ "Hans Muller Wikipedian in residence/guest". universiteitleiden.nl. Leiden University. 2022. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  2. ^ "Hans Muller". ascleiden.nl. African Studies Centre Leiden. 2022. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  3. ^ Muller, Hans (2023). "Project Wikipedian in residence 2019 - 2024". en.wikipedia.org. African Studies Centre Leiden. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  4. ^ Johan M. Muller publications indexed by Google Scholar
  5. ^ "Forum: Who is your African Icon? Focus on Africa Magazine". bbc.co.uk/focusonafricamagazine. BBC World Service Focus on Africa Magazine. 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2024.