Tannin wrote:
In a novel or in a work of general non-fiction,
it is perfectly acceptible (and indeed correct)
to not capitalise, as the intention of the work is
to highlight some thing other than the creature
in question. ....
And that is my very point - Wikipedia is a general reference and many of the
links to the bird/mammal articles will be from articles that "highlight some
thing other than the creature in question." In those articles it is most
correct to have "bald eagle" in the running text of the article and not
"Bald
Eagle".
In summary, there are three possibilities:
(a) That we always use binomial names if in the
slightest doubt about the identity of a species.
This would be, strictly speaking, correct, but
unreadable for the vast majority.
This would be the least desireable option. I took 2 years of Latin already and
didn't like it - all it did was screw-up my Spanish. :-)
(b) That we abandon the attempt to create a
scientifically
correct body of work, and become a light-weight, non-auhoritive
place that is little more than a glorified chat room. (Not that there
is anything wrong with chat rooms, it's just not what I think Wikipedia
ought to be. Nor you.)
Nobody is trying to make the articles scientifically incorrect. As I've stated
all my biology textbooks use the down style for the common names of species.
This does reflect a bias towards normal rules for English grammar and against
the artificial rules developed by birding societies/organizations (which, as
you have stated, have been developed to overcome subtle ambiguity issues). I
guess I should admit my own bias - I am a generalist who is often mistrustful
of specialists and other people who claim academic authority. In fact I
purposely did not choose a concentration for my biology major becasue I
feared that doing so would result in me becoming a specialist - thus I would
not be able to see the big picture on how things inter-relate.
(c) That we adopt the same solution as is used
by the vast majority of works that aim to be factual,
comprehensive, scientific, and accessible to the
general reader too - i.e., we use the correct capitalisation
for species names.
Like most encyclopedias, dictionaries and textbooks which employ the down
style?
I would be delighted to return to crafting factual,
readable,
accurate entries about fauna of all kinds. I have greatly
enjoyed doing that over the last few months.
I would also like to see you return to that - I really enjoy reading your work
and the work of your compatriots.
But, fair dinkum, I have had a gutfull of constant hit
and
run edits that do nothing but spoil the result of all the
effort I put in.
Certainely there is more info in the articles you have written that is not
codified in the particular capitalization of the title?
I don't want to be unreasonable or petulant, but
let's face
it, we all only work on articles because we enjoy doing it
and find it rewarding. I am no longer enjoying it, and it's no
longer rewarding. As I have documented elsewhere, everyone
who is doing bird entries on any significant scale has similar
problems. It's not just me. I just happen to be the one who has
reached the end of his tether first.
I'm sorry to hear that - the work that you and other people have done in this
area has been great.
So after reading what you have written and what tc wrote to me in an off-list
email I have decided to a compromise: Have the bird and mammal articles
follow the capitalization convention deemed appropriate by the specialists
and enthusiasts working on them BUT a down style redirect MUST be pointed to
the up style article title.
I also think what is needed is to make redirects far less ugly than they are
now. People seem to get real pissy when they follow a term they know and use
only to get a result that in effect screams "the method you are using to
access this page is depreciated". A technical fix here should solve a great
many naming disputes since, as it is, nobody seems to like to have their pet
spelling/method of capitalization/etc be a redirect becasue the resulting
page after following that redirect is ugly.
When a user accesses a page through a redirect it could be possible to change
the displayed H1 page title of the target page to match the title of redirect
(or at the very least move the redirect message from below the H1 title to
the very top of the page - as it was in Phase II).
But then we would either have to orphan misspellings and truly depreciated
redirects (like / pages) or have a two-tier system of redirects. That system
could use the #OBSOLETE syntax for depreciated page title redirects and
#REDIRECT for alternate and valid ways to express the same term.
That way users can link [[bald eagle]] in an article on US National Parks and
not be greeted by an ugly result that implies that the capitalization of
"bald eagle" was incorrect from where it was linked (when in fact that
capitalization was totally correct from where it was linked - but at the same
time it would not be correct to have a lowercased "bald eagle" linked from
[[eagle]] per the specialists' convention).
The correct capitalization here depends upon the grammatical context and
intent from where a term is linked. So if specialists will allow down style
links to their articles I can live with those articles following the up style
and other conventions deemed appropriate by those users - so long as the
resulting titles are still common names and if the ugly redirect problem is
fixed.
Alas it is getting late - I need to work on my WikiKarma.
-- Daniel Mayer (aka mav)