Resources for maintenance and collaboration |
---|
Cleanup |
Categories |
Create an article |
Referencing |
Stubs |
Deletion |
Polishing |
Translation into English |
Images |
Controversy |
To-do lists |
Disambiguation |
More |
|
For a listing of ongoing discussions, see the dashboard. |
This WikiProject is believed to be inactive. Consider looking for related projects for help or ask at the Teahouse.
If you are not currently a project participant and wish to help you may still participate in the project. This status should be changed if collaborative activity resumes. |
The purpose of this page is to list articles that are possible challenges for editors. New articles may be added from the queue in the bottom of this page's source once these have been removed.
We have a massive and detailed article on pain, but next to nothing about pleasure. Although pleasure is a crucial concept in psychology, philosophy and neuroscience, there's little but a stub. This needs fixing, though at the same time it makes sense. John J. Pershing at one point said "It is not pleasure but pain that a man must remember in battle."
Pleasure is also known as feelings. In the book or movie called Brave New World there was movies called feelies which had little depth of intellect but appealed completely to the senses as a pleasurable experience much like immorality, pornography or prostitution. Pleasure is derived from stimulation in a positive way that is created by the many forms of adult toys in a society that has much more time for play than generations ago. Many seek to live for feelings by shopping, watching movies, listening to music, driving their car etc...
I've had a go at improving the introduction. -SpaceMoose (talk) 05:15, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
Expand. This article should be much more detailed considering it is a major technology magazine in the U.S. Compare with the article on Wired.
Basic article, needs sources.
Current Luna Bowl "article" is a redirect to Luna Park, Cleveland (which itself could use a bit of expansion, a challenge in itself as the amusement park existed only from 1906 to 1929). The stadium framed by one or two roller coasters was an early multipurpose facility that hosted the Cleveland Panthers AFL team in 1926, a number of Negro League baseball teams, and the Cleveland Soccer Football Club. Details and reliable sources are hard to come by, but finding them would help flesh out an article on a key site of American sports and amusement history.
Current LunEur stub has been awaiting addition/translation from its corresponding article in Italian wikipedia (which itself barely outlines a history of a significant amusement park that existed for over 50 years and has a link to the 1960 Summer Olympic Games); there is no article at all for a predecessor park built by Frederick Ingersoll that lasted into the 1930's. Very little, if any online material exists on the earlier park.
Needs a lot of work for a very important article, but just paring down and have appropriate links to other skeleton articles might do too.also helpful
This article needs to be expanded and sourced. This is a featured article in Français, it puts ours to shame. An article on Boats should be a major article. I did a pretty good cleanup of the page, as it wasn't doing so well at all, but it needs a lot more work. In my opinion, an article on something so important should be at least up to the GA level.
Article needs to be rewritten and sourced -- it sounds like a translation in its current state.
Article is awkwardly written; needs to be completely rewritten.
For a topic so frequently discussed, I was unpleasantly surprised to see that the respect article is so short and so poorly written. It should be expanded to cover how respect is given in various cultures as well as a more thorough explanation as to what respect is. There are 336m google results, surely it can be improved upon.Smallman12q (talk) 22:23, 25 March 2009 (UTC)
Perhaps Respect should be merged with honor? They are about the same thing, after all. --Pimpachu (talk) 01:49, 3 August 2009 (UTC)
I've given it a go. -SpaceMoose (talk) 05:22, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
The article on the man himself (Osho) is much more detailed than that of his following. Currently contains one academic source and an article from the San Francisco Chronicle. Could use a great deal of expansion.
Both of these are extremely important politics articles, but are currently no more than messy stubs.