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Revision as of 10:05, 3 March 2009 editTomas e (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers74,567 editsm Correction← Previous edit Revision as of 10:06, 3 March 2009 edit undoJohnCD (talk | contribs)130,355 editsm Laws of compression: typoNext edit →
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*'''Undelete''' Dear people, I am the guilty person publishing his theory, and I thought it was relevant, since we have discussed this theory at my university, and I was one of those who liked it and thought it was a possible explanation of the P-11 anomaly. (Apparently a large part of the anomaly is mundane, according to this theory, but the last part has a twist to it.) Apparently the author is a completely unknown person, and I haven´t found anything on the Internet, or in the libraries, so first I thought it was a hoax, but I can´t give up just now. I will try and call the author and ask him on Monday, and ask him what he means by his theory. Let us just remember two things; we are discussing two issues, science and encyclopaedia. Even a mad theory, such as "lamarckism", does fit in an encyclopaedia. Personally, I think that Mordehai Milgroms MOND-theory is sheer and utter nonsense - from a physical point of view - but it is still worthy of an article. ANYONE with elementary physical education will se the importance of the formulae in the article "Theory of Compression". So please don´t take me for a fanatic, I am still on the sceptical side, but I think that this theory has some merit, more than that of a hoax. --] (]) 04:06, 1 March 2009 (UTC) *'''Undelete''' Dear people, I am the guilty person publishing his theory, and I thought it was relevant, since we have discussed this theory at my university, and I was one of those who liked it and thought it was a possible explanation of the P-11 anomaly. (Apparently a large part of the anomaly is mundane, according to this theory, but the last part has a twist to it.) Apparently the author is a completely unknown person, and I haven´t found anything on the Internet, or in the libraries, so first I thought it was a hoax, but I can´t give up just now. I will try and call the author and ask him on Monday, and ask him what he means by his theory. Let us just remember two things; we are discussing two issues, science and encyclopaedia. Even a mad theory, such as "lamarckism", does fit in an encyclopaedia. Personally, I think that Mordehai Milgroms MOND-theory is sheer and utter nonsense - from a physical point of view - but it is still worthy of an article. ANYONE with elementary physical education will se the importance of the formulae in the article "Theory of Compression". So please don´t take me for a fanatic, I am still on the sceptical side, but I think that this theory has some merit, more than that of a hoax. --] (]) 04:06, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
** ] was an incorrect ''but widely disseminated'' theory. This theory is not popular - it's not even published. ]<sub>(])</sub> 08:27, 1 March 2009 (UTC) ** ] was an incorrect ''but widely disseminated'' theory. This theory is not popular - it's not even published. ]<sub>(])</sub> 08:27, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
**Meatballs, The point is that Misplaced Pages is not a place for ''first'' publication of anything - see ] and ]. ''We'' don't decide whether a new theory is true or even interesting: we leave that task to others, such as the editors of peer-reviewed journals. The question here is, have Van den Swaerdenheem and his theories become ] enough for Misplaced Pages, and the test is, are there ] ] ] sources that discuss them? ] (]) 10:42, 1 March 2009 (UTC) **Meatballs, the point is that Misplaced Pages is not a place for ''first'' publication of anything - see ] and ]. ''We'' don't decide whether a new theory is true or even interesting: we leave that task to others, such as the editors of peer-reviewed journals. The question here is, have Van den Swaerdenheem and his theories become ] enough for Misplaced Pages, and the test is, are there ] ] ] sources that discuss them? ] (]) 10:42, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
*'''Delete'''. I'm concentrating on the ] article, rather than the other two. The name "Carl van den Swaerdenheem" give exactly only one Google hit - this article - and "van den Swaerdenheem" yields zero hits in the phone directory search for all public Swedish numbers (]). The name is either seriously misspelled, or he's called something completely different, or he's a hoax. No reliable sources, not verifiable, delete! ] (]) 10:05, 3 March 2009 (UTC) *'''Delete'''. I'm concentrating on the ] article, rather than the other two. The name "Carl van den Swaerdenheem" give exactly only one Google hit - this article - and "van den Swaerdenheem" yields zero hits in the phone directory search for all public Swedish numbers (]). The name is either seriously misspelled, or he's called something completely different, or he's a hoax. No reliable sources, not verifiable, delete! ] (]) 10:05, 3 March 2009 (UTC)



Revision as of 10:06, 3 March 2009

Laws of compression

Laws of compression (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (delete) – (View log)
Theory of compression (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Van den Swaerdenheem (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)

Walled garden of articles by a new editor about a Swedish "hobby-astronomer" and his fringe theories. Only source quoted is a paper which was presented but not accepted at a conference last year. Searches in Google Scholar and Google find nothing. Various speedies and PRODs have been applied, but it seems sensible to bring them all together here. Possible hoax, certainly not notable. Delete all. JohnCD (talk) 18:57, 28 February 2009 (UTC)

  • I am a student of Astronomy in Stockholm, and I became interested in this fringe theory of compression. I wrote the article for Misplaced Pages, which you kindly noted was fringe nonsense. I agree it is fringe, but why is it nonsense? If I use my calculator, and plot in the values for say the Sun and Venus, it all comes out right. And if it is right, from a mathematical point of view, how could it be nonsense? I agree fringe, but not nonsense. --Meatballs and pancakes (talk) 04:37, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
  • And me. And some of my friends at the uni. :) My humble suggestion is that you use the scientific method on this theory, instead of insulting the author. He is probably a nobody, but his mathematical formulae do work. That is why we used it in my class. --Meatballs and pancakes (talk) 04:48, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
  • Undelete Dear people, I am the guilty person publishing his theory, and I thought it was relevant, since we have discussed this theory at my university, and I was one of those who liked it and thought it was a possible explanation of the P-11 anomaly. (Apparently a large part of the anomaly is mundane, according to this theory, but the last part has a twist to it.) Apparently the author is a completely unknown person, and I haven´t found anything on the Internet, or in the libraries, so first I thought it was a hoax, but I can´t give up just now. I will try and call the author and ask him on Monday, and ask him what he means by his theory. Let us just remember two things; we are discussing two issues, science and encyclopaedia. Even a mad theory, such as "lamarckism", does fit in an encyclopaedia. Personally, I think that Mordehai Milgroms MOND-theory is sheer and utter nonsense - from a physical point of view - but it is still worthy of an article. ANYONE with elementary physical education will se the importance of the formulae in the article "Theory of Compression". So please don´t take me for a fanatic, I am still on the sceptical side, but I think that this theory has some merit, more than that of a hoax. --Meatballs and pancakes (talk) 04:06, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
  • Delete. I'm concentrating on the Van den Swaerdenheem article, rather than the other two. The name "Carl van den Swaerdenheem" give exactly only one Google hit - this article - and "van den Swaerdenheem" yields zero hits in the phone directory search for all public Swedish numbers (Eniro). The name is either seriously misspelled, or he's called something completely different, or he's a hoax. No reliable sources, not verifiable, delete! Tomas e (talk) 10:05, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
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