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How to confirm questionable source reliability

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Thanks to @Headbomb: for identifying the International Journal of Humanities and Social Science (isbn 2220-8488), the February 2016 issue of which was a cited source, as predatory and deleting its use in the revision logged here. While IJHSS for its issues in 2012 and 2013 does appear in the now-deactivated Beall's List, the caveats on page 5 of the 2015 report "Predatory open access journals in a performance-based funidng model: Common journals in Beall's list and in version V of the VABB-SHW" leave open the question of whether subsequent IJHSS issues, such as February 2016, are reliable/unreliable. In case useful to know, the journal's website declares it's peer reviewed and refereed, and neither the journal nor its publisher are mentioned among predatory examples in Wikipedia:Potentially unreliable sources#Scholarly journals, Reliable sources#Questionable sources and the Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard. What is advisable in this case?

Vandalism

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@QuotidianAl It's great if you wish ot make this article better but you cannot vandalize the page.

1/ D. Ikeda might have been an intellectual but "philosopher" was not his job. Can you quote a book of philosophy written by him ? Also, a majority of scholars and journalist agree to say he was a controversial leader. Controversial does not mean "bad", it means people had various impressions from good to bad. The Soka Gakkai became a rich organization under his reign, investing in japanese corporations, buying a large real estate in Tokyo and elsewhere. Thus, he can be considered as a businessman.

2/ The numbers of adherents released by the SG (12 million people, same number since 1990) is not an official account. Again, a canadian scholar estimates the number around 3 million in Japan. To respect NPOV, the article has to keep a critical look.

3/ Please stop pretending you "corrected some grammatical errors and repetitive sentences" when you simply vandalize the page. Raoul mishima (talk) 17:17, 15 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hello, I am sorry, but I have not engaged in vandalism on this page. It is you who is doing so, if at all, by removing most of my edits (which are source-based). Daisaku Ikeda was not officially a businessman (this distinguishes him from another East Asian religious figure like Sun Myung-Moon who clearly was a businessman, for example). He was the founder of two universities and various schools, so that qualifies him as an educator. As far as his philosophical books are concerned, "Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra" series is one example. It is your editorializing assessment to describe his as a businessman. Further, when I did my initial edits on May 14, and added that two percent of the Japanese population are Soka Gakkai members, that was edited out by a different editor to remove editorializing. Also, you have removed a cited reference that I made to a New York Times article published on his death, which made reference to his various activities, including outreach to China (something that was also mentioned in his NHK and other Japanese news broadcast obituaries). Further, I find it noteworthy that a critical comment I added regarding his controversial past is what you kept. It seems your effort is to paint him in as negative a light as possible in the introduction to the article. If in the past this article was hagiographical, now it is at the other extreme of being too critical and not being at par for the quality of a Wikipedia article. I ask that you stop removing all my edits (and references, like the New York Times article). You do not own this page. Wikipedia is supposed to be a shared endeavor. QuotidianAl (talk) 23:44, 15 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hello,
I agree with you on some points, but you should keep in mind that Ikeda was a controversial leader, in Japan and abroad, as remind most of his obituaries. This information is part of his life, and deserves to be denoted at the beginning of the article. I have read some pages of the book you quotes as a philosophical reference, I'm sorry but this does not make Ikeda a "philosopher", his books are not classified in philosohpy but in theology, and his teachings are not studied in any philosophical college : that's why I deleted this designation. Also, Jason Goulah can be considered as one of his followers and I don't think his books should be quoted here without any mention of that. This page needs better secondary sources, thanks for keeping this in mind. Raoul mishima (talk) 19:52, 28 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]


Irresponsible Editing Without Prior Discussion

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I've studied religion and philosophy focusing on comparative religion and Eastern traditions for over 30 years, and I've watched many Wikipedia articles related to Buddhist traditions (particularly from Japan and Korea) for over a decade. I haven't looked at this article in a long time, and I was shocked to see the recent "editing" that borders on vandalism by some new editors who have unilaterally slashed nearly 60% of the material from this article before they even participated in one discussion on the Talk page. This behaviour is irresponsible, disrespectful, and unacceptable in the Wikipedia community.

This article has been stable for nearly a decade. It has been contributed to by dozens of diverse editors for two decades. Then, this year, one new editor in particular during a period of just a couple months has deleted over 100,000 characters of material, without any discussion on the Talk page. I could easily report this as vandalism to administrators and request the editors who did this be suspended, and this article be locked. Clearly such vandal editors have an agenda that is biased, and I will report them to admins if that behavior continues.

It is also unacceptable to unilaterally add content back into an article that has already been thoroughly discussed and researched by other editors, who came to a consensus to remove such material. If you wish to add something you think is significant, the likelihood that it has already been discussed is very high, so please read the Talk page archives. Among the many different editors over the past two decades who have worked on this subject you will find multiple discussions about some content the "new" editors/vandals this year have been adding to this article.

For example, Talk page archives show there have been multiple discussions about the negative bias of Polly Toynbee who led controversial atheist organizations in the UK which ran ads bashing religious organizations and religious leaders. She publicly said "the only good religion is a dead religion." Such a source is not credible for a neutral point of view when it comes to the topic of a religious organization or leader.

As has been previously discussed on the Talk pages for decades, most religious leaders of global organizations are considered "controversial" by some sectors of society and the media for various reasons, whether they are Mormon, Catholic, Buddhist, and so on. This is not something that defines who the leaders are factually in a biographical, encyclopedic entry such as Wikipedia. The proper place to discuss properly sourced facts about "controversial" topics is in a section called "Controversies" like in other Wikipedia article about major world religious leaders (look at articles about past and present Popes, etc).

Also, the "edits" by some new editors this year appear to be people who are not native English speakers. If non-native English speakers would like to add significant content, it would be nice to first mention it on the Talk page so others can help convey the content in proper English.

Finally, another indication that some new "editors" this year are behaving like vandals is that they deleted 90% of the images that were in this article. Obviously the intention behind someone deleting longstanding images from an article without any prior discussion is indicative of vandalism and/or negative bias.

I will soon begin working to correct all of the above mentioned issues with restorative edits. JimminyOzland7 (talk) 16:52, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hello
This article has not been stable for nearly a decade, just have a look at the previous "talk" pages please. There has never been a clear consensus here, as the same pages show. The modifications you just made are a real problem according to WP standards, NPOV mainly. Also, the sources you added are mainly primary sources, as you know it, and this page lacks secondary/tertiary sources. I'm going to republish the page as it was before your intervention, we should talk about this here. Eventually, if you are a member of this organization, WP asks you to say it clearly : ? Raoul mishima (talk)) 13:50, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Raoul: You have also repeatedly evaded the question about conflict of interest. In addition, you have falsely tagged the article as protected. This is disruptive activity on your part, and can lead to your account being blocked. Make the COI declaration as you are required to do, and refrain from making any substantive changes to this article without first gaining consensus on the talk page. ~Anachronist (talk) 08:21, 21 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

This page is biased with a positive tone and poor citations

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The page reads as if it was written by SGI. It’s far too positive and gives too much credence to SGI’s figures and biographical accounts 2603:8080:1900:2C1F:6111:EC50:67F7:DEBD (talk) 03:32, 3 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Philosopher ?

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Hello I'm a bit embarassed when I read Daisaku Ikeda was a "philosopher". I read about buddhism and japanese philosophy, but could not find any philosophy book by D. Ikeda, nore philosophy colleges where his writings are taught... Any clues ? I will remove the word unless there are testimonies or sources, thanks. Raoul mishima (talk) 08:14, 6 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

How is he a "leader"? There's an entire books section on the article; either way, reliable sources usually call him a philosopher, thus he is a philosopher. Aaron Liu (talk) 15:38, 6 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Please quote the "reliable sources" thanks. Plus : writing books does not make the writer a philosopher, does it ? Raoul mishima (talk) 18:22, 6 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
https://cse.google.com/cse?cx=a0a45496e245345f5#gsc.tab=0&gsc.q=Daisaku%20Ikeda%20%22philosopher%22&gsc.sort=
You asked for philosophy books. The section includes them. In Life: An Enigma, a Precious Jewel (1982), Unlocking the Mysteries of Birth and Death (1984), discussions of a Buddhist ontology offer an alternative to anthropocentric and biocentric approaches to wildlife conservation. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:30, 6 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Your links show :
- press releases from the Soka Gakkai (not reliable)
- sentences taken from press releases (not reliable)
Would you lease quote some more reliable sources ?
A book titled "Unlocking the mysteries of birth and death" does not make his author a philosopher. Did you read it ?
Talking about buddhism does not make you a philosopher either.
Would you also explain what kind of philosopher, thought, school, Ikeda is supposed to belong to ? Raoul mishima (talk) 15:53, 7 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The RNS press releases are not all of the results in the search. For example, the CNN source says, Daisaku Ikeda is president of the Japanese Buddhist group Soka Gakkai International and a philosopher, writer and educator. I do not see how that is quoting a press release. There's much more in there. Aaron Liu (talk) 16:09, 7 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In your recent revert, you said:

links provided in "talk" are questionable. Please quote scholars, universities where his "philosophy" is taught.
— Special:Diff/1248288647

Firstly, there is no such requirement on Wikipedia for the topic of philosophy. Any news articles are, in fact, good.
Secondly, this article is literally everything you need. It was created for the purposes of adding all of these sources later so the main article could be posted to the main page. The sources you want start as early as source [10].
Finally, you are supposed to discuss here, not in revert summaries. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:27, 28 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Aaron Liu, First of all I have a question : are you a member of the SGI ? As you may know, Wikipedia asks you to declare your membership of such religious organizations, in order to prevent COI.

About the links you provided proving Daisaku Ikeda was a philosopher, it is simply a demonstration by agreement on the lowest common denominator. You typed "Daisaku Ikeda philosopher" and found 10 links : cheering ! If you only type "Daisaku Ikeda" you will find fifty times more links NOT saying he was a philosopher.

How was Ikeda's occupation/role displayed by the main world medias when he died ?

BBC : former leader of Japan's influential Buddhist group Soka Gakkai

Reuters : longtime spiritual leader

AFP : Influential Japanese religious leader

Xinhua : honorary president of Japan's major lay Buddhist organization Soka Gakkai

Then, you talked about the "requirement on Wikipedia for the topic of philosophy" : what is this requirement ? As described by WP, philosophy is a "rational and critical inquiry that reflects on its own methods and assumptions". Does that apply to Ikeda's teaching ? Or would you please quote a philosopher / a philosophy book quoting Ikeda ? Would you also name a college where his ideas are taught ?

You quote his books titles, I assume you've readen them : what kind of philosophy does it bring to the fore ? (please don't answer "buddhism" thanks). Would you please quote philosophical demonstrations or sentences from it ?

I found some on his own website :

- "In the innermost depths of all beings there is the primal life-force and it causes living beings to live"

- "A moment's encounter can decide the direction of one's entire life"

- "Dialogue and education for peace can help free our hearts from the impulse toward intolerance and the rejection of others"

- "Each of us must seek to discover the particular theme or motif that will characterize our life"

- "Great art is created only through diligent and painstaking effort to perfect and polish oneself"

Well, it's full of wisdom... but is it philosophy ? Raoul mishima (talk) 12:10, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]