Talk:Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory
This item was rescued from Wikipedia on October 10, 2006. According to Wikipedia's deletion discussion page, the reasons for vote of deletion were as follows:
This is a bollocks-ridden "fringe theory". It has not been published in any reliable sources — both journals from which the article is sourced are decidedly cranky (Medical Hypotheses particularly: they will publish anything, quite literally, as long as the author pays per page [1]). It also fails notability policies, since no real assertion of notability is made. And it arguably is original research as well. Moreover, Wikipedia does not need to be a platform for the promotion of utterly misleading drivel.
Was prodded yesterday by someone else, but the tag was removed by an IP/anon with no explanation.Byrgenwulf 14:24, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
Update The creator's apparent vanity piece has also been nominated for deletion, here. Byrgenwulf 17:49, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete as a violation of all the policies mentioned in the nomination. I suspect this article violates WP:VAIN as well: it was created by an IP, Template:User, who also edited New York Law School last April. According to Huping Hu (the article on the inventor of this "theory"), Hu attended that school in the 1990s. Anville 17:29, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete per nom and Anville. Note that this was deleted in November 2004, which looks to be before the deletion log started, but see Special:Undelete/Spin-Mediated_Consciousness_Theory and request for investigation about the same IP. I've left a note for user:Ancheta Wis, who seems to be the one requesting deletion back then and appears to still be active. Thryduulf 19:14, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Good detective work. The first link you posted only works for admins, it appears, but the discovery is nonetheless interesting. Anville 19:43, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, Special:Undelete is an admin-only page. I should have noted that, sorry. Thryduulf 20:04, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- From the old manual deletion log:
- 15:16, 26 Nov 2004 DropDeadGorgias deleted Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory
- Uncle G 20:22, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Good detective work. The first link you posted only works for admins, it appears, but the discovery is nonetheless interesting. Anville 19:43, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete per nom. Tempshill 20:12, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete per nom, especially WP:BOLLOCKS. --Pjacobi 21:48, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete per Huping Hu. This piece was initially written by me when Wikipedia was in its infant stage back in 2004 as a way to introduce our Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory because someone cited our Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory in the Consciousness and, I believe, quantum mind entry. Please be advised that Anville's statement with respect to spamming is factually false and, upon information and belief, libelous. Our Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory speaks for itself and if it was added or edited within quantum mind and spin the purpose was related to relevancy not vanity. May GOD bless Wikipedia and its participants so that it may stay useful, innovative, diverse and informative.
- Looks like you are claiming that you are Huping Hu and also that you are the author of the two articles. Is that correct? If so I add WP:NPOV to my vote. And Template:User, please review WP:NLT and note that making legal threats in the Wikipedia is gravely frowned upon.---CH 23:09, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete as per WP:BOLLOCKS. This article reads like pure pseudoscientific newagery; there is a bit about (poorly described) physical background but no indication of how spin states are supposed to generate conciouness, so the article completely fails in its mission of even describing the alleged "theory". NeuroQuantology?!! Is this yet another crankjournal? Sheesh! Can we consolidate this AfD with the biography? I agree with User:Anville that even a cursory examination raises the issue of WP:VAIN. ---CH 22:55, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- We had an article on NeuroQuantology at some point, but it met a justly deserved fate (PRODed, I believe, not AfD). A Google Scholar search on that journal was quite illuminating, as was a perusal of its website. . . but that's not really a topic germane to this discussion. Anville 23:19, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete No evidence of notability.Edison 20:47, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- Delete per above. linas 04:27, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
- Keep!* No current theory of consciousness will be the correct one. Or even close to the correct one. They will all verge on scientism. But, based upon this article in Wikipedia, this Spin-Mediated Consciousness Theory (SMCT) looks like the best one we've got so far. Please don't discourage serious attempts at the hard problem of consciousness by immediately deleting every theory which is proposed! Template:Spa
- Delete No evidence of notability; the theory is a bollocks-ridden fringe theory whose main claim to fame is appearing in this Wikipedia article. John Baez 04:18, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
Discussion on Wikipedia as of October 10, 2006:
Woudn't VfD be more apropriate than Speedy? Unless this is a copyvio, does anybody have a link? Sander123 15:07, 26 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Looks to me like a random crackpot theory. Though by what sounds like a real scientist. Should probably be left up but with a warning - tentative random ramblings of a biologist, don't give any serious belief to.
This is idiocy. What difference does it make if it is "random" or whether or not you agree with it? Somebody proposed it, so it exists. Wikipedia is simply a record of knowledge, and part of that knowledge concerns what is proposed by people as theories, whether or not some people consider them to be "crackpot" or not. Why don't you delete the article on phlogiston then, or on Ptolemaic astronomy, or anything else that turned out to be utter non-sense? (and, no, I am not saying this particular theory is utter non-sense). Pretending it doesn't exist does not make it go away. Tag removed.Sayfadeen
- Wikipedia is not a record of every crackpot theory. See the WP:NOR policy. Tempshill 20:48, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
Touche. So why not just say: "This violates the NOR policy" rather than "This is a crack-pot theory." The first is a valid reason for deletion, the second is just baiting and insult. Sayfadeen