Talk:Life of Pi
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[edit] Plagiarism
I have removed references to a plagiarism lawsuit from the article, as it appears this was a false rumor that never had any merit. I found multiple references to the rumor, but no actual statements that a lawsuit was ever started. Perhaps with a bit of time, the falseness of this rumor and lack of merit of the charges has become clear. --ssd 22:40, 23 July 2005 (UTC)
The Problem with "Plagiarism Controversy" (April 18, 2005)
I was taken aback by this entry, which comments on the Plagiarism Controversy without simultaneously mentioning problem WITH this controversy and the key dilemma authors face with the stretch taken with "COPYRIGHT" these days. (BTW -- nothing was DELETED from it???)
First of all, if Scliar is making such a claim, it is a reminder, as LIBRARY JOURNAL NOTES in the article "Too Sensitized to Plagiarism?" (by: Francine Fialkoff, Dec. 15, 2002), "that you can never be too careful either in making accusations or verifying charges of plagiarism" (1).
Fialkoff notes in her article the main problem: the books were never "compared" -- an activity that should have been done by the New York Times before publishing any charge of plagiarism. She plainly states: "Had someone at the TIMES gone to the 'local' library to compare the two novles, any thoughts of plagiarism would have been dismissed".
The question of whether an "idea" in a story can be considered "intellectual property", i.e., a person who is stranded on a boat with a cat, consider the story of NOAH'S ARK. Perhaps Scliar's publisher should track down the grave of the divinely inspired, as one can be sure that Noah had some cats on his ARK. A note to the wise. Find more than ONE source when doing research. (Perhaps this is just a scholar's frustration with the lack of "facts" being represented, so please understand this statement in that light).
(This NOTE is dedicated to students who are reading this novel for English class and shall continue to remain very CONFUSED about this controversy until they read this discussion entry and/or try to do some of their own research and investigation, esp. with regard to this controversy and Martel's novel. My hope is that they will not take this controversy point seriously as something that can influence their opinion of the story. There is another side to this controversy that was not addressed and should be at a future time.
REF: http://print.google.com/print/doc?articleid=LF2OM5i4dJA
Deletion of part of the article is dishonest and unfair. The article is quite neutral and is only informing a fact, without taking parties w[h]ether the Life of Pi is a plagiarism or not. It is necessary to inform the happening to this work and so the Plagiari[s]ms Controversy is an indeleable fact.
I have mixed feelings on your point. But who deleted any article? What is this comment all about? I read this article 2 weeks ago, and nothing has been deleted. What does this discussion comment mean? How can it be even made when this is a "free encyclopedia" and information is not intended (as the disclaimer states) to always be filtered in a scholarly way. How can such a point be made when there is no control over the information added or deleted: that reality makes this tool useful and also very questionable at the same time. Useful because people can share ideas. Dangerous because ideas/comments are not always TRUE. That is why this discussion page is useful -and why the first comment is an important START to a very important discussion- it is for the very purpose of discussing articles themselves.
If information can be easily deleted, and editing is encouraged by the encyclopedia guidelines -- how is such information to be protected? It can't. Isn't that the point? (Ironically we are talking about plagiarism here!!). Essentially, in a perfect world, no one would touch this encyclopedia without the best of intentions; yet the disclaimer ENCOURAGES the addition of information from ANYONE; which is also an "indeleable fact". Isn't that more dishonest and irresponsible?
(For the record, the above comment on the article was created because the lack of information initially created confusion among many readers of this novel. To discount it just to say that the "plagiarism controversy is an "indeleable fact" is itself "unfair" to the spirit of the discussion thread.)
To be more precise, the article states some "fact", but does not attempt to state the TRUTH about whether or not the novel was plagiarised. Martel's novel is set in INDIA and was created there and in Canada -- a hybrid birth.
Martel states that he read and did research on Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and visited a lot of zoos in India while he gathered ideas for the novel. A lot of hard work went into this novel, Martel states in an article in The Globe and Mail. While Dr. Scliar's book, Max and the Cats had to do with a shipreck and a survivor who gets stuck in a boat with a cat, it is too gratuituous to say that this article is stating 'fact'. It states, "Plagiarism Controversy" so boldly in the title and yet it does not state the particulars beyond plot summarizing Scliar's novel: "a story of a German refugeee who has to share his boat with a jaguar at his Atlantic crossing."
In that light, can one not argue that it is also unfair and injust to state something about the plagiarism controversy without showing both sides of the story? Does this encyclopedia entry attempt to talk at length about the novel and Scliar's in the effort to verify the Plagiarism Controversy? Does it state the entirety of the facts which outline the plagiarism controversy?
It is unfair and injust that it was posted in the first place without any follow-up or any adequate research or "links" to other opinions. Now THAT is irresponsible. In any case, the article has created confusion instead of clarifying the truth.
Isn't the role of this kind of site to clarify what the controversy is when it is defined and addressed? (Who's deleting anything? One need not delete what has already been omitted: the entire story).
(If such information is not screened by the right scholars and teachers of this material, then doesn't any-thing go? In a perfect world, no one would alter this text. Most don't care to alter it. Still, to make a judgement about that something HAS been altered without even knowing if it WAS altered in the first place is very telling. This is key to the issue being discussed: did Martel take Schliar's book and "alter" it, change it into his own story, and market it as his own? What exactly IS literary plagiarism? This aspect of the article doesn't seem to take any time to consider this question or to address the severity of this claim. It also fails to comment on how the media so quickly jumped on this controversy without doing the proper research.
I agree, one should read the DISCLAIMER for WIKIPEDIA before making any judgements on the nature of this kind of forum. The very "editing" capacity of this encyclopedia is essentially problematic and dissuades readers from seeking information from other, more reliable and informed sources.
While your point (which should also be spell checked -- I took the liberty of doing so -- another problem with this site) is true, it is focused on the smaller picture. Even this comment can be deleted one day!
Please sign your posts - use a fake name, or use the 4 tilde shortcut. You can go back and sign old posts also. Stbalbach 05:58, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
[edit] External link
Why was the external link removed? What does non-encycopedic mean? No reviews are written as if for an encyclopedia. This review gave sales information, a history of the pre-publication, an interview with the author, and a review of the book. Was this removed simply because Stbalbach disagreed with the critic's opinion? It was a legitimate review, from a quite popular UK blog, so I have re-added it. Iago Dali 00:19, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
- Generally blog posts are frowned on at Wikipedia because anyone can write a blog post. If the review was by a well known author, or the review is well know, or published, then it would be arguably encyclopedic. But just some person that no one has ever heard of on the Internet doesnt warrant a Wikipedia external link. There are other forums for that kind of thing. Stbalbach 01:22, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
That's outright Elitist nonsense! This post is far more well written and informative than your typical review in the NY Times. There are plenty of blog and online links throughout Wikipedia. Now, if you are stating that you thought this fellow had some non-literary reason for writing, or it was a mere ad for the book, that's legitimate, but because this guy doesn't cash a NY Times paycheck. Wiki is supposed to be demotic! Is the piece poorly written? No. As for the man- his blog is a well-known literary blog in the UK- is this anti-Brit bias? I've looked for reviews, and save for Amazon there are precious few. I am re-adding this. I think you need a better reason than Elitist snobbery. Iago Dali 12:18, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
- Removing link. See rule on Original Research. Also see rule on civil conduct and name calling. Stbalbach 13:07, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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- While the name calling should be avoided, I agree with Iago Dali that the link should remain. Articles on literature should link to both positive and negative reviews to give the full range of analysis and thought on a said literature. To this end, I have added several additional reviews. I also disagree on not linking to blogs. There is no Wiki rule against doing this and it is done plenty of times on this site. In addition, Grumpy Old Bookman is a well-known literary blog who has excellent insight into literary issues. --Alabamaboy 13:42, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
Thanks for agreement! Stbalbach, I've looked at original research and it simply does not apply in this case- lest all 'original' opinions in a review would be invalidated. Criticism should be original- lest it be considered PLAGIARISM (see above). That point applies more to scientific areas. I'm sorry if calling your opinion Elitist offended you, but your seeming bias against the Internet offended me, so let's leave it at that. And, as the other poster states, the rule you cite against the Internet simply does not exist. Iago Dali 13:52, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
Wikipedia is not a link aggregator, there has to be a measure of what is allowed otherwise anyone who happens to write a review and post it on the Internet can link to it and many will abuse this process in order to increase their blog google ranking. A google search of "Life of Pi review"s found 88,000 hits. Some large fraction of those are random peoples reviews. Which should we include on Wikipedia? There are other forums that aggregate book reviews. The reviews on Wikipedia need to have some significance. There are rules about what should or should not be included in the external links section. Its fine to link to blogs if there is a significant reason to do so. Stbalbach 14:34, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Of course Wikipedia isn't a link aggregator. However, most literary articles can benefit from having links to a sampling of reviews, especially if the reviews showcase the full spectrum of thought on a book or literary subject. If there were twenty reviews listed in this article's external links section, I would object. But a few is a good thing. That said, this article should be expanded. Life of Pi is one of my favorite books and I'll put this on my list of articles to expand when I get the time.--Alabamaboy 14:51, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Great! I hope your able to do this article justice. Ive also read the book, and have been a contributor to the article. Stbalbach 15:10, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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I have looked at the original research provisions and that would apply to in text info, not links. But it is not applicable here. Under Neo Nazism there are assorted links to articles and URLs detailing their philosophy, but they are not accorded in text mentions. Are you saying this review is more noxious than a Neo-Nazi site? If so, I would question your objectivity. Also, your need for "significance" is a bit disturbing. Would an Atlantic Monthly review, even if it's just pap designed to sell the book, be more worthy than an online piece, well-written. I agree that this piece in question goes beyond your typical review, so even by your definition, it certainly is significant for its textual value alone. I've read, for instance, many online movie reviews that put a Roger Ebert or Ken Turan, of the LA Times, to shame, in depth and style. Are you saying that fame or name brand is a quality preferable to content and cogency? I could see trimming a links section with 200 links, but the first one, and for reasons that other users say are invalid? The links should stay, and any other relevant links. If all the review said was, "This rocks" or "This blows" you would have a point, but I disagree with the very notion that you or anyone else is the sole arbiter of significance. I'm not a fan of political blogs, and there is much bad writing on them, as well as extremism of the Neo-Nazi sort. But, they are a significant development, whether I like them or not, and the blog mentioned seems to be one of the more significant in literature. I vote the links remain, and use Stbalbach's very definition in the case for them. Red Darwin 14:58, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
- Well, not that Ill do this, but for a mind experiment, what if I pasted 100 reviews into the article. That would be a problem because Wikipedia is not a link aggregator. Then I ask you to sort it out and remove all but the most significant. How would you decide? That is the problem over time as future editors add their reviews. Links need to be justified as having significance. This is in the Wikipedia rules on external links BTW. If you want to see what happens when things get out of hand, see the external links section of Holocaust. Stbalbach 15:10, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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- I include the external links page:
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What to link to In Wikipedia, it is possible to link to external websites. Such links are referred to as "external links". Many articles have a small section containing a few external links. There are a few things which should be considered when adding an external link.
- Is it accessible?
- Is it proper? (useful, tasteful, etc?)
- Is it entered correctly?
In general, external links should be accessible by the widest audience possible. That is, try to avoid sites requiring payment, registration, or extra applications (Flash, Java, etc.) to see the relevant content, at least if there is a simpler site available. If the best/only site does have such requirements, it is best to include a note to that effect. For people with a slow connection, also mention the size if that is large. Examples: "(requires Java)", "(1 MB PDF file)", "(requires registration)". The same applies to any sites with ads that spawn new windows.
What should be linked to
- Official sites should be added to the page of any organization, person, or other entity that has an official site.
- Sites that have been cited or used as references in the creation of a text. Intellectual honesty requires that any site actually used as a reference be cited. To fail to do so is plagiarism.
- If a book or other text that is the subject of an article exists somewhere on the Internet it should be linked to.
- On articles with multiple Points of View, a link to sites dedicated to each, with a detailed explanation of each link. The number of links dedicated to one POV should not overwhelm the number dedicated to any other. One should attempt to add comments to these links informing the reader of what their POV is.
- High content pages that contain neutral and accurate material not already in the article. Ideally this content should be integrated into the Wikipedia article at which point the link would remain as a reference.
Maybe OK to add
- For albums, movies, books: one or two links to professional reviews which express some sort of general sentiment. For films, Movie Review Query Engine, Internet Movie DataBase, Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic offer especially large collections of reviews. To access the list of other collections of movie reviews available online, please use this link.
- Web directories: When deemed appropriate by those contributing to an article on Wikipedia, a link to one web directory listing can be added, with preference to open directories (if two are comparable and only one is open). If deemed unnecessary, or if no good directory listing exists, one should not be included.
- Fan sites: On articles about topics with many fansites, including a link to one major fansite is appropriate, marking the link as such. In extreme cases, a link to a web directory of fansites can replace this link.
What should not be linked to
- Wikipedia disapproves strongly of links that are added for advertising purposes. Adding links to one's own page is strongly discouraged. The mass adding of links to any website is also strongly discouraged, and any such operation should be raised at the Village Pump or other such page and approved by the community before going ahead. Persistently linking to one's own site is considered Vandalism and can result in sanctions. See also External link spamming.
- Links to a site that is selling products, unless it applies via a "do" above.
What can be done with a dead external link External links to dead URLs are of no use to Wikipedia articles. Such dead links should either be removed or updated with archived versions, which may be found at the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.
Note that some dead links are caused by vandalism (for example, a vandal disabling links to products competing with vandal's favorite product). It may therefore be worth checking to see if there is a working link in earlier versions of article. Some vandalism of this type is quite subtle, e.g., replacing ASCII letters in the URL with identical-looking Cyrillic letters.
Point 3 on what should be linked to, and those in what should not be linked to support the inclusion. Point 1 in Maybe Ok also supports the link. The blog entry clearly is well written. I see nothing except a nebulous idea of "significance" that mediates against its inclusion. Again, with so many pages in severe need of trimming, in links and other means, which go well beyond the 32k prefernce it seems silly to argue over a solid review whose only flaw is that another user deems it insignificant, with no real clarification. Again, your links example makes the very point you wish it did not. ;-) Red Darwin 15:12, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Point 4 in Links to also allows MPOVs- which a review willnaturally be--pro or con. Your point re: excess links I agree with, but 1 or 3 hardly qualifies. It might be resonable to allow one pro, one con, and one middle view, but what of some brilliant review that has all three? Yes, it should not get out of hand, but smothering them in the crib is not palatable either. Red Darwin 15:19, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Forensic evidence from the boat
There were bones of small animals found in the boat — is that all the forensics investigation got? Come on! I may be watching CSI too much, but I bet one can find tiger hairs, animal saliva, claw marks, and human blood in the lifeboat to prove which story really happened. And, in the very unlikely case that there is no other evidence in the boat, Occam's Razor tells us which is likely true: The story without animals. -- Perfecto 08:13, 26 December 2005 (UTC)
That's the whole point of the story: do you believe the version that perhaps seems more logical, or the version that the boy told, ("and so it goes with God"). Occam's Razor tells us God doesn't exist, either. --Pyg 18:17, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] When published?
When was Life of Pi first published? It only gives the date for when it won the award. -- Stbalbach 01:29, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
The novel was first published in September 2001, the Knopf Canada edition being the "true first". Victoriagirl 15:49, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
- Thank you for clarifying that. -- Stbalbach 17:14, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Misleading edit
Stbalbach wrote:
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- "this is accurate and clear - pleae explain yourself on the talk page to avoid an edit war"
I am happy to do so.
Here is the text before Stbalbach's edit:
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- "Captain Dudley and three sailors were stranded in a skiff in the Pacific after the sinking of their yacht Mignonette on the way to Australia. They are forced to eat one of the party to survive, and feast on his body for 35 days – a sailor boy named Richard Parker! Yet another Richard Parker died when his ship, named the Francis Spaight, sank in January 1846. Ten years earlier, in December 1835, an earlier Francis Spaight was wrecked in the north Atlantic: some of the survivors of that wreck too were involved in cannibalism."
And after Stbalbach's edit:
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- "Captain Dudley and three sailors were stranded in a skiff in the Pacific after the sinking of their yacht Mignonette on the way to Australia. They are forced to eat one of the party to survive, and feast on his body for 35 days – a sailor boy named Richard Parker! Yet another Richard Parker died when his ship, named the Francis Spaight, sank in January 1846. Although this Richard Parker was not eaten, some of the survivors of that wreck too were involved in cannibalism."
This is clear, but hardly accurate. Stbalbach's version clearly states that some of the survivors of the wreck of the Francis Spaight which sank in January 1846 were involved in cannibalism. That's a very serious accusation, and completely without foundation.
Reverting. Again. :) --TheMadBaron 16:33, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
- Please read the cited source, it says: he died when the Francis Speight - on board which a number of seamen had been eaten - foundered in 1846. -- Stbalbach 18:00, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Indeed it does. It says:
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- "(or did he die? Can't remember).
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- [Ed. Yes, another one bites the dust: he died when the Francis Speight - on board which a number of seamen had been eaten - foundered in 1846."
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- I would say that that was pretty shoddy editorial work, since it was clearly another, earlier Francis Spaight wreck which led to the cannibalism. The editor even spells the name wrong. That sort of work may have a home on canongate.net, but it has no place in an encyclopedia.
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- This does, though....
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- "The Limerick shipowner Francis Spaight named at least two ships after himself. The London Times of June 22, 1836 reported the wreck of the first of these ships, which had taken place on December 3, 1835. A boy named Patrick O'Brien, the ship's cook John Gorman and another boy named George Burns were in turn killed and eaten by their fellow survivors before they were rescued by a passing American ship, the Agenoria. This incident was retold by Jack London as a short story, entitled The "Francis Spaight" (A True Tale Retold), written in 1908. Many years earlier, it may well have inspired Poe's novel, published a couple of years after the wreck.
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- Spaight soon sold the second boat named after himself, built in 1836. It was under different ownership when it was wrecked in Table Bay near Capetown on January 7, 1846. Fifteen of the crew and eight rescuers lost their lives. There could not have been any cannibalism associated with this shipwreck, for the ship ran aground rather than drifting in the open seas. By coincidence, there was an apprentice called Richard Parker among the victims of the 1846 Francis Spaight sinking."
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- Please see The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket.
--TheMadBaron 19:03, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
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- I stand corrected, the source I was basing this on is inaccurate. Adding an additional cite and info to clarify for the reader. -- Stbalbach 21:21, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Oi! You can't just give in like that! I came here for an argument! --TheMadBaron 00:07, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
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- I came here for an argument! .. That sums up Wikipedia pretty well. -- Stbalbach 00:35, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] The Symbolism Section
I think something needs to be done about the Symbolism section. Not only is it poorly written and entirely arbitrary and biased conjecture from whoever wrote it, but it is also misleading because there is entirely different symbolism acknowledged within the actual book. The section does not even address that symbolism, which is an actual part of the plot, and I think the Symbolism section would be far better off if it were deleted or changed to address the symbolism that is actually relevant to the plot and confirmed within the book.
Pervan 05:25, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I didn't write it, but I actually learned a lot from the symbolism section of this article. Literary criticism is soft analysis, I would be surprised to learn there is only one valid viewpoint to any piece of literature. I could see a complaint being made about no citation (ie. who said it), but there is nothing factually false about the analysis that would require its deletion, only a disagreement in interpretation. As for missing material, if there is something missing, can you add it, so we have multiple points of view represented? Please don't think this article only presents a single point of view, or that multiple points of view can't contradict each other. You can add other analysis, even if it contradicts what is there.-- Stbalbach 23:15, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I tagged it as unreferenced, because I think that's the basic problem. It's okay to give some literary interpretations of the book, but not the interpretations of the person that wrote the section. That's akin to original research. It should decribe notable literary analyses published elsewhere, and describe them as their respective author's views rather than absolute truth. What's more, it should stick to views that are agreed on by several people. If nobody feels like doing this kind of rewrite in the near future, I think the section should be removed until somebody does. risk 16:22, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- No problem my only request is, to keep the article from looking like the newspaper coupon page, use {fact} templates instead of the banners. NPOV is pretty serious, I'm not sure there is a problem with that, this is literary interpretation it will always be POV, it doesn't cite its sources your right. Lets see what happens. -- Stbalbach 00:06, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Symbolism
Regarding this recently deleted symbolism section (which is IMO excellent material), it is preserved here in case someone can provide a cite to restore it to the article:
- Symbolism
- During Pi's time adrift, he's exposed to three separate, deadly entities: a tiger, the sea, and a floating island of algae. Each is symbolic of one of Pi's religions, and perhaps reflects Pi or the author's attitudes towards each. The tiger is Hinduism, as evidenced by the quote, "orange — such a nice Hindu colour" (pg 138). The island, most notable for its verdant green hue, represents Islam: "Green is a lovely colour. It is the colour of Islam" (pg. 257). We can derive that the sea represents Christianity, with the fish an early Christian symbol for Jesus.[citation needed]
- A possible interpretation is that while the tiger, sea, and island all represent mortal dangers to Pi, they also each contribute to his salvation. Richard Parker may devour Pi, but he also keeps him company and forces Pi to develop a discipline. The sea may drown Pi, or he may get killed by sea animals, but Pi is also able to feed himself and Richard Parker with fish and sea turtles. The island is carnivorous, but also grants Pi and Richard Parker the chance to fortify themselves before departing.[citation needed]
- It is noteworthy that if Pi isn't cautious, any of the three threats may consume him — literally and spiritually. The message, it seems, is: any religion that offers salvation also has dangers associated with it, and the devout follower must be careful not to be devoured.[citation needed]
- The phrase "Life of Pie" (of European origin), is regularly understood to mean self-fulfillment of tasks or dreams, however grandiose or unreasonable. The greek letter Pi (π), which stands for the well-known mathematical constant, is racked with historical wonder for the lack of repeating patterns in its decimal expansion. "The Life of Pi", therefore, could be understood to mean the fulfillment of a life most mysterious and challenging.[citation needed]
--Stbalbach 13:41, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Plot Problem
- The Plot section isn't in order. Most of it is fairly well-written. But, after it states that they lifeboat finally reaches dry land, Mexico, it then states that they went to an island. However this occured much before going to Mexico did. ("The lifeboat finally reaches dry land in Mexico, at which point Richard Parker leaves without warning. Eventually, the duo wash ashore upon a strange wooded island, populated by meerkats, and containing pools of fresh water. ")I'd like them fixed, and I don't really have the power to do so. 70.35.204.78 22:56, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
- You do have the power. Just rewrite the section in the same way you have here. Thanks, Peregrine981 01:03, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Last reversion by Stbalbach
I follow this article with special interest and I would not like to see it getting spam. I also see you are a beneficial hand here. I checked the link provided by the "red" user Stavros44 and couldn't find anything it's trying to sell, but looks like a place for people to place comments and views, not that there was any serious "thesis" however. Maybe it doesn't qualify as a link, but it doesn't look like spam. I would appreciate to learn a bit more on criteria of links' inclusions. Hoverfish 17:50, 29 September 2006 (UTC)---Ok, followed links deeper, selling of essays, you are right, no doubt here, sorry for being hasty to post this. Hoverfish 17:57, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
- The site GeekyGirlsEssays is a problem spammer on other articles which I have no patience for, they have been warned multiple times and keep at it using various tricks to hide their activities - this particular link is not so bad although its questionable if the content is of any value, we already have Wikiquote. Usually they post a direct link to their essay writing service (ie. students pay for written essays). Basically what they are doing now is put up some quick low-value content for the purpose of drawing links to the essay writing service. -- Stbalbach 16:02, 30 September 2006 (UTC)
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- Thank you, Stbalbach. Last night I spend quite some time studying the above discussions on linking and also followed links to relevant Wikipedia pages. One other thing I noticed is your hope on the symbolism entries (which are indeed very interesting) finding enough notations to be reincluded. I'm not very experienced but I can't see how one could avoid research on them. Could it be possible to create another article on Symbolism in the Life of Pi (or something similar)? Maybe under such a title such entries could survive without citing sources. Maybe not. What do you think? Hoverfish 18:44, 30 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Author's note
In the author's note, the author claims this is all based on a true story, with the recorded conversations at the end being real conversations. I don't see this covered anywhere in the article. Is it true or relevant? Some guy 10:41, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
- What page of the book are you referring to? -- Stbalbach 13:44, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
- ...page? I'm talking about the author's note before the beginning. It's labeled "Author's Note" or "A Note from the Author" or something like that. It probably isn't in every version of the book. Some guy 10:19, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
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- Ahh.. that's a literary device known as a false document. Or, you can choose to believe it :-) -- Stbalbach 14:43, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] blind?
Why and How does he go blind from malnuritment? Is ther a wiki explenation link? how lbind can one go tmeporarly? --Procrastinating@talk2me 20:09, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] ?
What does it mean when the article describes the writing style as medieval? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by GOODBYEKITTY (talk • contribs) .
- Added a link to medieval allegory. Basically, it means there are allegories operating on multiple levels, of a religious (Christian) nature. -- Stbalbach 14:40, 30 November 2006 (UTC)