- List of tall men (edit|talk|history|links|watch|logs) (restore|AfD1|AfD2|AfD3|AfD4)
The article was deleted even though no consensus was reached. 17 users supported deletion (one of which was simply "per nom", but was not discounted) and 17 voted to keep the article (a few of the "keep" votes were discounted by the closing administrator). Now, granted that Wikipedia is not a democracy, but AfDs should be decided through consensus and not polling. 17 vs. 12 or 13 hardly seems to be a consensus.
Note: For the sake of consistency, I am also nominating List of tall women for deletion review (the result of the AfD debate was a consensus keep).
The administrator's justification for the decision is that:
The arguments to keep are very poor in comparison with those for deletion. Nobody has succesfully refuted the chief reason for deletion - that the list is subjective and there is no accepted single definition of what to be 'tall' means.
However, a number of users directly addressed and refuted the chief reason for deletion--the "subjectivity" of the term tall. See, for instance, the comment by User:The Fat Man Who Never Came Back against a "fruitless semantic exercise":
NOR applies to "new definitions of pre-existing terms;" it does not preclude the variable, reasonable interpretation of very common adjectives.
The criticism of the subjectivity of the term "tall" blurs the distinction between a criterion that is subjective and one that has alternatives. Notability could, in theory, have any number of possible (and plausible) definitions, but WP:Notability is an objective criterion. Likewise, the term tall could have varying interpretations, but it can also be an objective criterion (reached through consensus, verified by external sources, and explicitly noted at the start of the article).
At the least, the article should be restored so that it could be renamed to List of the tallest men (per the suggestion by User:Penwhale, which could list the tallest men ever, in specific countries/regions, at particular times in history, etc. (this is really a matter for that article’s talk page). Black Falcon 19:37, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Note: This article has undergone an AfD three more times (as copied from the most recent AfD): Black Falcon 19:51, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Comment - At the risk of rehashing my comments on the AFD, I do reject Proto's notion that there being "no accepted single definition of what to be 'tall' means" is a reason for deletion. The obvious consequences of that logic are distasteful, particularly the deletion of many valuable, high-quality lists simply because they cover a group which has no definitive parameters. Christopher Parham (talk) 19:54, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Strongly agree with C. Parham. On my talk page, I've listed links to many lists that are now in danger because they contain subjective adjectives like "early," "black," "unusual" and "large." Consensus building is hard work, but many good-faith editors were striving to come to agreement as to what criteria should be used to build the deleted list. To cut that work short by deleting the article (rather than assisting the editors in achieveing consensus) is rather like cutting the proverbial baby in half to solve a parentage dispute.--The Fat Man Who Never Came Back 21:55, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- I agree. The lost was improved a lot and the reason for deletion was refuted, with 'tall' parametres set by official authorities.Halbared 18:42, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse Deletion. Closing admin made sound policy and guideline based conclusion, no real basis to overturn his call on it. Despite what is said, it appears that the main reason to overturn in !vote counting more than anything. Agent 86 20:08, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Comment as closer - something I didn't note in the close, which perhaps I should have, is that reaching an agreed consensus on what "tall" means "through consensus, verified by external sources, and explicitly noted at the start of the article" would be just splendid. Is it therefore churlish to point out that the article had existed since October 11 2005 (over fifteen months) without managing to arrive upon an agreed consensus on what "tall" means, and no sign of it ever being attained? Proto::► 20:28, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
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- The discussion was primarily due to fears of the list getting too lengthy. Also it included some on the other side who wanted "their tall guy" included for whatever reason so pushed for a lower standard. That "tall" exists, and can be measured to some degree, I don't think was the point. In retrospect I wish the higher standard of 201 centimetres, the standard used at the Italian one, had been kept as this is almost certainly in the highest percentile of human height in any society. As for another issue, it is incorrect that a variable physical commonality is arbitrary or verboten for lists. There is a Category:Lists of people by physical attribute and many things in Category:Lists of people with disabilities could also apply. In addition Tall Men are a subject of scholarly study. I concede that the disdain for lists is powerful so perhaps an article on Tall men or Tallest men would be better, but because of this deletion I'm not sure such an article can be created.--T. Anthony 23:20, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Also note I do stand by my closing judgement - the issue wasn't no original research (although an argument could be made for an arbvitrary cutoff point being just that, it wasn't a prevailing discussion in the AFD), it was Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information - arbitrary and subjective lists are just that. Isn't that what the main thrust of the deletion arguments were about? Proto::► 20:34, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion. The nominator made a very strong case, and all the people who voted delete either also made a good case, or mentioned several policies. The people who voted keep didn't have much to say, some didn't say anything at all. Iced Kola(Mmm...) 20:43, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- The majority of the keep votes were more well-reasoned than that. In addition there were several delete votes that were "delete per nom" or essentially said "it's stupid", but were not stricken. In addition we have several lists like List of buildings with 100 floors or more. Isn't "a 100 floors" also essentially arbitrary? If this had been called List of men over two metres tall would it have been more acceptable because it admits it chose an arbitrary number? Anyway back to the main point, even if you go by what wasn't stricken you had an almost equal number of keeps and deletes each with their own considered arguments. I am perplexed how this means a concensus to delete and I still fail to see how a fair reading of the discussion could lead one to think that. Most of those endorsing closure here have not given a satisfactory answer to that, I feel, and some of them voted delete at the discussion. (I am not an administrator and I have not voted, or whatever you call it, here at all. Still I voted keep there, but I would refrain here even if I could endorse/oppose) Maybe I strayed as well, but the discussion is what mattered. Did the discussion have a concensus to delete and if so can you show how. That's all.--T. Anthony 06:19, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- What value is it to mention several policies if they are inapplicable? True, those who voted delete linked to more policies, but this means nothing by itself. In addition, those voting keep linked to policies such as WP:NOR (in that the article doesn't violate it) and WP:POINT and referenced other policies in various threads or comments. Black Falcon 23:42, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- It is disturbing that the AFDs for the "tall women" and "tall men" discussions reached contradictory conclusions even though they were run at about the same time. Nevertheless, I can find no fault with the reasoning put forth by the closer of this discussion. I must endorse the closure and continue to struggle to accept that Wikipedia is often inconsistent. Rossami (talk) 20:44, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- The tall women one was closed early, quite possibly incorrectly as the pattern of argument was not unanimous, through WP:SNOW. That discussion could easily be repopened - is that within the aegis of this DRV discussion? Proto::► 21:02, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Comment by DRV nominator: I apologize for the lengthy DRV nomination and this lengthy comment, but there are two other points that I believe deserve consideration and were not explicitly mentioned in the AfD.
- Any relational adjective (such as tall, short, large, big, wide, deep, etc.) can be interpreted in different ways. The lower limit of such adjectives can be disputed, but this does not mean that they are hopelessly subjective. Following that logic, every list of the biggest, greatest, largest, longest, tallest, etc. should be deleted (e.g., every list noted in List of "largest" articles). The same logic applies for the opposite: smallest, shortest, cheapest, etc. Lists based on relational adjectives can be encyclopedic, even if they cannot be defined so as to be free of any controversy (to reject any cutoff point, even say 2.5 meters, approaches WP:POINT).
- Although I do understand the frustration of those who supported deletion that the article hasn't reached resolution so far, it seems like they are giving up on the article. The criticism of the subjectivity of relational adjectives is, as noted in the AfD, "a fruitless semantic exercise, inimical to the subjective nature of language itself". —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Black Falcon (talk • contribs) 22:22, 30 January 2007 (UTC).
- Endorse deletion. This is just as unsalvagely biased as a List of smart men would be. We can't decide how tall someone must be to be "tall", and there is no agreed on definition, so what are we going to use? If we had a [[List of tallest men]], that might be okay, but that isn't it. -Amark moo! 00:37, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- I have no opinion on this debate, mostly because I never saw the list. But I seriously doubt "list of tall men" could be as biased as "list of smart men", for the simple reason that a person's height can be accurately and objectively measured, while their intelligence cannot. If we wanted to ensure the maintainability of the list we could choose a minimum height and make it a "list of men over 7 ft. tall" which would also meet or exceed any reasonable person's definition of "tall". In that situation it would be easy to determine who qualifies to be listed, because it's all based on raw height, rather than demographic-based comparisons. If we were dealing with intelligence rather than height, none of these statements would be indisputably true. — CharlotteWebb 02:59, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, you're right. A better comparison would be something like List of men with high IQ. -Amark moo! 03:39, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Well there's no list, but we have a Category:Members of Mensa. Going beyond IQ we have List of young people in history, List of famous people who died young, List of physically disabled politicians etc. Is "young", "dying young", or physical disability inarguably defined? Perhaps not, but absolute exactness in all things is neither necessary nor plausible. If it were we'd have to get into debates about the definition of science fiction every time there's a List of science fiction authors or editors or what not.--T. Anthony 04:22, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Allow me to present a list of the words that would become off-limits for WP articles: tall/short, young/old, dark/light, long/short, large/small, big/small, great/small, costly/cheap, high/low, hot/cold, warm/cool, deep/shallow, unusual, and so forth. Essentially every article or statement that uses a relational adjective would need to be deleted. Such adjectives are a normal part of every-day speech and everyone has a general understanding of what they mean. Their specification is a matter of attaining WP:Consensus through discussion (supported by published sources) on article talk pages. The article has received 4 AfD nominations -- maybe some of that effort should have gone into discussing these issues on the article's talk page (I can't check to be sure (as the page is deleted now, but as I recall, none of the issues brought up in this last AfD were really even noted on the talk page). Black Falcon 05:22, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Um... No. A consensus that something not biased does not make it unbiased. No matter how many sources you can get, it is a POV to say how tall someone "tall" is. And the word "tall" is not banned; if you are writing an article on, say, Yao Ming, you can say "He is considered tall by many people". You would probably be able to just describe him as tall, since so many sources would agree on that. The issue with a list is that a list must have a cutoff point, which will be either biased or set so high that the list is useless. And either way, it will be arbitrary, with people an inch under not being included as tall for no good reason.-Amark moo! 05:27, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Much of what you say would still apply to young/old, etc lists. Why is dying at 39 "dying young" and dying at 40 not "dying young?" Is the nineteenth century death of Frédéric Chopin's, at 39, truly a "younger death" than say Caron Keating's? Numerically yes as he died two years younger than she, but she lived into the 21st century with modern medicine.--T. Anthony 06:34, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion per all the arguments, not to mention the article was at many times simply a vandalism target. JuJube 02:08, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion. The arguments for deletion were strong, they were not suffiently answered, so the admin called it as delete. That's what's supposed to happen. So the AFD was closed correctly. I see a lot of talk above by the DRV nominator about what "tall" is supposed to mean, but remember, this is not AFD part 2. Some such discussion may be necessary, but please stick to what is relevent to the actual closing. — coelacan talk — 06:02, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Also, relist or delete list of tall women. I was not aware that this list was on AFD at the time, but all of the arguments that brought down list of tall men apply equally to this article, so it should be deleted for the very same reasons. It appears that this article simply received fewer votes because it was lower-profile. If relisting is the necessary route, then so be it, but I think that it's obvious that one can simply apply the same arguments in this case, so deletion would be warranted. — coelacan talk — 06:12, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Did someone mention my name? ... Oh yeah, BF did. Per AfD, my suggestion on this issue is thus: Rename to tallest men thereby bypassing the necessity to define the line between "tall" and "not-tall". - Penwhale | Blast the Penwhale 09:26, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion as AfD nominator. This could arguably be salvaged by making it a list of men who were known in their time and genre for being unusually tall, based on assessments by reliable secondary sources, but even that would fail the test of arbitrariness. Consensus is not a few dozen people !voting on a single AfD, consensus is the broad measure of support for policy, in this case WP:NOT. The main attempts to address subjectivity seemed to me to be in terms of changing the value of the subjective criterion for height, and that ain't going to fly. Guy (Help!) 09:48, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Comment - 'Largest' and 'tall' are different superlatives ... the equivalent would be 'largest' and 'tallest'. List of tallest men would probably be ok. A simple, non-controversial cut off, such as '20 tallest men alive', '20 tallest men ever', and 5 tallest notable people in certain professions where height is noteworthy and relevant (e.g. NBA) could then be created. Proto::► 10:12, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Subjectivity and Überwikipedia - I do agree that List of tall men was inappropriate, but I think it should have been renamed (moved) to List of tallest men (or List of tallest people--merging the men and women articles) and edited to fit to its new purpose rather than deleted. Following the logic of the AfD with regard to your proposed List of tallest men, wouldn't 20 also be a "subjective" number? Or 10? Or 50? Or any other number? Essentially any list that is not naturally bound (e.g., a list of countries, a list of capital cities) would be "subjective" as any cut-off point is "arbitrary". I believe it is a useless exercise to try to impose a level of rigidity on WP that is not present in the English language itself, and that may indeed diminish the quality of the encyclopedia. -- Black Falcon 17:38, 31 January 2007 (UTC)Black Falcon 17:30, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- I believe I'm going to have to quote you later, Black Falcon, as you've said this much more concisely than I've yet managed. It really is misleading to think that we can somehow make this list objective by slightly altering the title. There's nothing "non-controversial" about 20. Someone will come along and want their favorite person on the list, and insist that "oh, 30 is simple and non-controversial too". And there would be no good argument for why they're wrong, any more than there'd be a good argument that they're right. The AFD closer noted this, correctly. — coelacan talk — 22:54, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- You are right. 30 is no better or worse than 20. And that is why I have suggested (repeatedly) that the specific number be left to the WP:Consensus on an article's talk page. According to your arguments, any list that is not naturally bound (e.g., a list of countries, a list of capital cities) should be deleted (including at least 2 featured lists). You demand a level of objectivity which does not exist in any human language. Black Falcon 23:18, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Considering how strong the feelings are of people against lists I keep thinking we should just create some kind of Wiki-Almanac or separate space for them. I've suggested this several times, but nothing's ever really been discussed on it. It seems an almost random policy of selective deletion is preferred. Shrug, whatever.--T. Anthony 23:25, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- I'm sorry Black Falcon, I misread and thought you actually were agreeing with me. I didn't mean to twist your argument to my own. Putting that aside, a list of countries and a list of capital cities are both bound lists. There are a finite number of them, that can be counted by objective processes. So if a list lists all of them, then there's no subjective cutoff point for POV pushers to push around. I disagree with your suggestion that we can arrive at a number for this list by consensus. How would a consensus even begin to develop, if everyone has their own ideas about what a "good" number is, and there's no measure for who's got a better idea? For consensus to form, some people have to be able to convince at least a few others that one choice is better. If I were set on 25, who could ever make a coherent argument that I should reconsider that and go with 20 or 30? If there's no coherent argument, where is the consensus going to come from? — coelacan talk — 23:35, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- No apology necessary. The consensus will come from discussion and (hopefully) some common sense. Yes, if someone is completely set on 25, neither man nor God nor a snarling pitbull (well, maybe that one) could move them. By applying this principle, think of how much encyclopedic content will be deleted: extremes of elevation, size, length, depth, temperature, density, price, longevity, etc. If we can get consensus on religious and political articles, I believe we can get it for a list of height. Also note that I favor the existence of a "List of tallest men/women/people" rather than just plain "tall". However, according to the "subjectivity" argument, the "tallest" article would also be deleted. Black Falcon 23:50, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- This already was a list of tallest men. What's the difference besides three letters? Is this just a different adjective to battle the meaning of? — coelacan talk — 20:45, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse correct interpretation of the debate. I stronly agree with Proto above that "tall" is much more problematic than "tallest". Eluchil404 13:34, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Relist both, possibly bundle with Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/List of short men. The fact that these discussions produce different results implies more informed and structured arguments should take place at some centralized location with all the points laid out. Wikipedia may be inconsistent, but that doesn't mean we can't take a further look. It could be argued that consensus will never be reached, but that's no reason to ignore the problem altogether by deleting it. The main closing reason - the subjectivity concerning the adjective - is convincing because it's an ideal, but it asks for way too much. It's ideal to be as non-discriminatory as possible, but that's simply impossible. No one denies that the cut-off point would be arbitary the same way Wikipedia arbitarily exists. But even if the cut-off point fluctuates from time to time, at least we would have an encyclopaedic article about the world's tallest men, a topic of genuine interest. Practically, the cut-off point isn't a big deal; what is of main interest is who appears at the top of the list, not the bottom. I agree that "tall" should be "tallest", because that is what the article did list. "Tallest" would clarify the scope to refute the point that the list neglects people who, although not the tallest of all time, were considered tall in their specific era. If you feel they should be included, great, but that was not what the article set out to do, until the people working on the article were pressured to put the basketball players into their own section. Even if other articles are not supposed to be brought into question here, the consequence should seriously be considered: that a lot of other lists with adjectives fall under the same scrutiny - they are just not debated as much to the point of AfDs. Pomte 02:08, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
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- The fact that these discussions gave different results implies only that list of tall men gets more traffic and so got more attention in AFD. Systemic gendered bias? Perhaps. Coincidence? Perhaps. Neither prevents list of tall women from going back on AFD and getting sufficient attention this time, when it's not competing with list of tall men. Other such articles should be AFD'd as well; I've no disagreement there. Practically, the cutoff point has been a huge deal, the subject of constant, and I mean constant, daily, even hourly, edit warring. The article can never be salvagable because everybody wants their own interpretation of "tall" to be enforced, and this is perfectly reasonable for everyone to edit war over because the cutoff point is arbitrary. There was never a compromise or consensus settled upon, and that's why AFD happened over and over, and when it became apparent that no consensus would ever form, that's why the last AFD finally came down as close. It's encyclopedia information, sure. Include that information in the articles of the people themselves. They should have their heights in their articles. Thus no information need be lost. — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- It seems pretty ridiculous for someone to look for "tallest people" only to find that the list has been deleted due to debates concerning the bottom of the list. So the topic itself is not fundamentally flawed, but the article got deleted just because of certain Wikipedians' attitude? Then the argument that the list is arbitrary is only secondary to the fact that people have taken advantage of said arbitrariness. If arbitrariness were the real core issue, then why haven't the delete proponents pushed other such lists for AfD in order to be consistent and to benefit Wikipedia as a whole? It wouldn't be making a WP:POINT because the argument is supposedly strong. Pomte 23:32, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion - given the subjectivity inherent in the title, the closer made a good call.--Docg 02:25, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion. First rate close showing full understanding of the debate. The article was inherently subjective and generally pointless. Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information which is exactly this list was. WJBscribe 02:31, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse recreating. For reasons mentioned above. Also that deleting this article opens up a big can of worms for deleting other articles. Yet another reason is that clearer consensus ought to have been sought than the non-consensus that was reached before deleting an article that has already gone through numberious AfD's. Mathmo Talk 07:25, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
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- The arguments to keep did not answer the arguments to delete. So consensus was there, even if several people said "keep!", they did not provide sufficient counterargument. — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- This is not AFD part 2. The discussion here is whether the AFD was properly closed. That is all. — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- Restore history The arguments that this is not notable or subjective are facetious. We already have world's records in all sorts of things. Perhaps there are too many entries here, but that can be addressed by undue weight. There is no need to delete the entire entry. Wjhonson 09:16, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Please see [{WP:DRV]] and see what the purpose of this discussion is. It's not to debate the merits of the article. — coelacan talk — 20:41, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Given that the closing admin's reason for deletion was essentially that criticism of the article is not addressed, it is perfectly acceptable to discuss the merit of such criticisms. Black Falcon 02:32, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
- Comment I would have voted for deletion, but the closing admin seems to have acted improperly as there was no consensus. I would suggest that this admin should lose his or her deletion privileges. Pinoakcourt 20:44, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
- That might be a tad drastic. I agree there was no concensus to delete at the discussion and this is the main reason I requested this be placed here. However if it was an honest mistake or misinterpretation I don't think Proto needs to lose privileges. A warning of "don't do it again" should suffice, unless this becomes some kind of pattern.--T. Anthony 03:12, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- There's no need for even a warning. Consensus was followed. Just because some people show up and yell "keep!" doesn't mean they are providing arguments, so their !votes don't count. There were strong arguments for deletion. Those arguments were not sufficiently answered. How much clearer can it get? — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think many of us disagree that concensus was followed. You seem to be saying that concensus happens when keep voters fail to outargue the deleters thoroughly enough. I don't think that's what it means at all as this would make "delete" the default position. There was a great deal of valid arguments and counterarguments with neither side predominating really. This means "no concensus" as far as I know. That you dismissed or disliked keep arguments is your prerogative, but it doesn't create a concensus. (And yes I said I'm done with you, but this is as much for others as your benefit).--T. Anthony 02:28, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
- Coelacan, please refrain from such derogatory comments that portray a significant number of users as nothing more than whiny, hysterical people who do nothing but repeat the same exclamation without providing rational arguments. You do not have a monopoly on the truth! Black Falcon 02:44, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
- overturn and consider the two articles together Though WP may be inconsistent, it shouldn't be making opposite formal decisions on two almost identical cases on the same day. This is the sort of thing appeal procedures are for, and the only fair thing is to do it over. DGG 05:20, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
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- The other article only passed because it didn't receive as much attention. When this DRV is over, list of tall women can be relisted and get sufficient attention this time. There's no reason to restore this article just to delete the other one. — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- That is your opinion. If you're so confident that the consensus is delete, why not restore this article and relist both together (as should have probably been done in the first place)? Black Falcon 02:32, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse Deletion and agree with closing admins statement. -Royalguard11(Talk·Desk·Review Me!) 21:14, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn, subjectivity of the bottom end cutoff is one thing, but this is not a fundamentally flawed topic. There are world records, scholarly studies, and scores of news reports all devoted to the subject of unusually tall people. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 19:13, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- This is not AFD part 2. The discussion here is whether the AFD was properly closed. That is all. — coelacan talk — 20:39, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- If the reason behind the deletion was inappropriate or unjustified by WP policy/guidelines/convention, then that means the discussion was inappropriately closed. "AfD part 2" is irrelevant here. Black Falcon 20:59, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
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- But Night Gyr is not arguing any policy that I can see. — coelacan talk — 22:00, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- The admin closed it as delete instead of no consensus because he felt the list fundamentally violated policy. The list doesn't fundamentally violate policy through excessive subjectivity, as the subject has obviously been studied extensively, and some form of the list would be valid. Night Gyr (talk/Oy) 22:17, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- Proto cites, above, WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE. If "tall" is subjective, then the list is inherently indiscriminate. That's a policy it violates, in addition to WP:NOR regarding what "tall" is supposed to be, which I argued in the AFD. Also, from Proto's AFD closing rationale: "The arguments to keep are very poor in comparison with those for deletion. Nobody has succesfully refuted the chief reason for deletion"; that's WP:CONSENSUS. There were a number of !votes for keep, but they didn't answer the problems raised, problems founded in NOT and NOR and since AFD is not a vote, the arguments are what decide it. — coelacan talk — 22:51, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- List of tall men does not directly fall under any classes of articles listed under WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE, and the bottom of the list being subjective does not mean the list as a whole is indiscriminate. Pomte 23:32, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
- The admin closed the debate because, according to him, the arguments for delete were not addressed by other editors. To disagree with that claim is to disagree with the closing admin's interpretation of "consensus" and is therefore very relevant here. Black Falcon 02:32, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
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