Issuepedia:Reinforcement by Contradiction

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Claims made within the pages of Issuepedia may make use of the policy of Reinforcement by Contradiction, which can be set forth as follows:

  • Given Issuepedia's wiki nature, it is possible for anyone who disagrees with any statement in Issuepedia to post an argument against that statement.
  • It is often difficult and tiresome to attempt to track down documentation to support statements of judgment, especially if they are the result of a novel thought-process.
  • Conversely, it is useful to have a compendium of points of view and judgments on various issues (along with any counter-arguments to those arguments, counter-counter-arguments, and hopefully some sort of ultimate resolution) because they will no doubt be raised many times in other venues regardless of accuracy, and such a collection will thereby help prevent the wasted effort of re-hashing those same arguments repeatedly. This is true regardless of whether those statements turn out to be valid.
  • Therefore, Issuepedia has a policy of allowing unsupported statements in its pages.
  • However, it should be noted that unsupported statements should be considered carefully, rather than being accepted uncritically.
  • This is especially true with regard to statements of judgment which stand uncontradicted. Supporting facts can be misinterpreted, but counter-arguments have to be countered out in the open.
  • Hence: statements of judgment which have successfully withstood the test of contradiction are more likely to be reasonable and accurate than those which have not been contradicted, regardless of whether they have supporting facts.

Issuepedia's policy on statements which have been contradicted and whose reasoning has not survived that contradiction is to leave them in place but with a strikethrough, like this.

As a matter of politeness and entropy-reduction, please try to indicate statements which are probably more personal opinion than reasonably sound opinion as such – either by signing them, by putting them in an "Opinion" section, or by putting them on the "Discussion" page for that article. (We do recognize the difficulty in differentiating here, so just do your best; hopefully we'll be able to come up with a clearer definitional distinction as more examples accumulate.)