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While it may make sense to have a Movement of Spiritual Inner Awareness category for purposes of new religious scholarship, adding notable students of this spiritual movement to this category does not make sense. Or, if it does, there would be very large "Catholic" and "Buddhist" and "Mormon" categories, and most of the author entries in Wikipeida would have some kind of religious tag (or perhaps an "Atheism") category at the bottom of their page. Just because it is a new religious movement does not mean it deserves any special consideration. -Cyberscribe16:16, 24 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't subscribe to the reasoning. He is a public figure, who has been publicly associated with the movement. I am not aware of any WP policy about this. Is there one? DCDuring16:36, 24 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Allen continued to speak as if he were commited to MSIA, its founder, and its teachings as of the writing of the Sept. 2007 Wired article. I am surprised that there isn't some mention of it in the WP article. With a little-known, New-agish thing like MSIA folks get nervous that there is some kind of Trojan-horse meme embedded in the GTD methodology. That is the warrant for including a mention of MSIA in the DA article. I personally think that the book and the approach stand on their own merits and have no connection with any religious "cult", if that word is even a fair characterization of MSIA. People do get enthusiastic about GTD and do seem to go through a period of very high enthusiasm for the system, but this would hardly warrant calling GTD itself a "cult", though journalists seem to like to do so. DCDuring22:12, 24 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Why is David Allen categorized as a motivational author? It seems contrary to the substance of his books, his consulting practice, and even his personality in my understanding. DCDuring22:25, 24 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure who raised the possibility or why, especially since they added no commentary to either this page or GTD, but I don't agree with the merge. Allen has written other books, and although GTD is his signature methodology, he stands sufficiently well-known in his own right to have his own page (he is regularly interviewed by major news sources around the world, cited in books and otherwise referenced as a leading figure in productivity). Natebailey (talk) 23:07, 3 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]