Wikipedia:Essays in a nutshell/Consensus and discussion
This Wikipedia page has been superseded by Wikipedia:Essay directory and is retained primarily for historical reference. |
Nutshells in a nutshell: This is an essays in a nutshell page. Essays in a nutshell is a navigation aid that summarizes the gist of Wikipedia's essays. Essays can also be navigated via categories, navigation templates, or Special:Search. For a listing and more information on searching for essays, see Wikipedia:About essay searching. |
Essay | In a nutshell | Shortcuts | Impact |
---|---|---|---|
False consensus |
False consensus applies to any supposed "consensus" arrived at through canvassing, vote-stacking, or other manipulation of a process or discussion contrary to policy or to ArbCom decisions. Admins should disregard any such claimed consensus, and open a re-discussion, barring those who engaged in improper activity. Actions taken on the basis of a false consensus may be discounted by ArbCom or by other administrators. |
||
Procedurally flawed consensus |
A procedurally flawed consensus results from editors not following a wikipedia procedure. Procedurally flawed consensus results in a re-examination of the consensus, but not necessarily its overturning |
||
Reducing consensus to an algorithm |
While consensus formation on Wikipedia cannot literally be reduced to a mathematical function, the likelihood of success of a proposition in a content dispute is actually fairly simple to predict with a model. |
||
Sham consensus |
A sham consensus may not be relied on, because it violates a policy, a guideline, or an ArbCom decision. |
||
Wrongful consensus |
A wrongful consensus results from violation of policy or guideline and is not reliable as a consensus. |
WP:WRONGFULCONSENSUS |