Ancient Futures
Ancient Futures
Propagandananda? – Ian Alexander
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Propagandananda? – Ian Alexander

Behind the scenes of yoga Wikipedia

How reliable are articles on yoga by contributors to Wikipedia? 🤷‍♂️

More than they used to be, thanks to the input of Ian Alexander, who’s personally edited between a third and half of them. Many of these meet the criteria for what the free encyclopaedia calls a “good article” – combining clear, neutral writing with verifiable sourcing and broad coverage.

Ian Alexander (a.k.a. Chiswick Chap)

For the 25 years since Wikipedia launched, it’s been dependent on the work of volunteers. In an age of hallucinating chatbots, this human commitment is all the more striking. Our conversation explores how it works, why Ian got involved and where the yoga WikiProject might go from here.

We also talk about other things – from pages on the writings of Tolkien to Swami Propagandananda, a nickname for Sivananda that Ian included in one of his edits. He’s a longstanding yoga practitioner, as well as writing books about nature and software engineering.

For more on Wikipedia, and the principles of trust it depends on, see this book by founder Jimmy Wales – thanks to Dominik Wujastyk for the recommendation.


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