Two-party system

Revision as of 22:34, 3 March 2004 by 142.177.92.200 (talk)

One theory is that neutral point of view is really a systemic bias (in large public wikis, an editorial bias). This is resisted by a New Troll point of view that refers to it as groupthink or just bogus or a product of individual biases. In other words, they insist that the community point of view deserves no special status as a route to truth.

If a wiki is troll-friendly, the trolls will gain rights and this forces sysop power structure to adhere to some social contract - the dissensus has status alongside the consensus, though there is only one of each.

From these roots a two-party system develops. Formal factions in and out of these two parties jockey for control of the consensus and the dissensus within each party. Eventually, when the factionally defined terms are clear and distinct from the core glossary, a true multiple point of view system evolves, and a trusted bureaucracy implements the demands of the ruling party - which only rules for some fixed period of time.

By this theory, Wikinfo is a more advanced Wikipedia, which under this theory is quite early in its evolution.

See w:two-party system for historical examples of this in politics.