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This was interesting topic. Overall, I think you have a good start on your article. Great job on giving some of examples of 'paradox of analysis'. I didn't get this analysis at first but after I read some of examples, I clearly understood about this topic. One of the resource page was from 'The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy' which gave me some credibility. Also it presents information in an well objective manner includes all sides of an issue represented. If you were looking to add length to your article, you could summarize Plato's Meno breifly. Other than, I can't think of anything to expand. I find few articles that are related with your topic. You might find other informations to expand. Overall, great job~
1. Title: Analysis, Language, and Concepts: The Second Paradox of Analysis by Felicia Ackerman http://www.jstor.org.libproxy.lib.unc.edu/sici?sici=1520-8583%281990%294%3A%3C535%3AALACTSPOA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-1&origin=serialsolutions&cookieSet=1
2. Title: The Paradox of Analysis by Richard A. Fumerton http://www.jstor.org.libproxy.lib.unc.edu/stable/2107643?seq=
Your article fully describes the paradox. Any oblivious reader can stumble upon your article and immediately become familiar with the paradox of analysis. There is no bias and the sources are definitely credible. Your article is straight to the point in an encyclopedic fashion, however it is also somewhat definitional, perhaps due to the length. This is not necessarily a weakness of your article, but there may be room for additional sections. For example, on the Wikipedia page for "Raven paradox" there are sections for proposed resolutions and solutions. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raven_paradox> I understand that this paradox may be easier to expand upon than yours, but perhaps there are resolutions or some other scholarly discussions that may be pertinent to your article and make a good addition to it. After looking at the additional references suggested by the previous peer reviewer, I think you have enough resources to find any information that may contribute to adding another section. Also, I remember you said that you have found another resource which may be useful as well. Good work. Nbarnes32 (talk) 15:50, 25 March 2009 (UTC)
Your page looks good- you chose an interesting and very complex topic and it is evident that the Paradox of Analysis is something that personally fascinates you. One of the most important aspects of this assignment as we write our individual Wikipedia articles is to recognize your audience and keep in mind that both the extremely knowledgeable AND uniformed might search this topic. It is important to speak to the masses and perhaps tone down the extremely intellectual and complex ideas you mention. I found your topic, at times, hard to understand having no prior familiarity with the Paradox of Analysis. Also, I think you should state in the first opening sentence exactly what it is- a definition, theory, idea, etc.? Be as specific as possible without losing the attention span of your audience. Lastly, expand more on your topic; your article is rather short and will benefit by adding some more background information, important people associated with the topic, links, etc...anything of relevance. Great start- just keep updating the page! -Virginia Knott --Vknott (talk) 03:45, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
The structure of the article is good in that it begins with the definition followed by the example, and it is straight to the point, or encyclopedic, and has absolutely no bias. It being so straight to the point is perhaps the article's weakness though as it displays almost only a definition. All previous reviewers have suggested expanding and given other resources and I fully agree with them. I understand the topic is complex and hard to find information on, but expanding it in any way possible will add to helping readers comprehend the paradox. All of your current sources are credible but keep searching in trying to add too the article. If nothing else, adding a second example would go a long way in providing clarity, where some readers may not necessarily "get" the bachelor example. One last suggestion would be to expand on the background of the paradox of analysis. When or why did it arise? And what is the term classified as, literature, Language, Science? What brought about this paradox and is it still studied or taught today? Basically is it still a current topic, or is it a thing of the past with Plato and G.E. Moore? Good start so far, very interesting and intellectual topic, good luck in finishing it up. MB3C (talk) 05:07, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- Paradox Resolved:-
- In a system where a transformation rule exists to turn "brother" into "male sibling", (1) [For all x, x is a brother if and only if x is a male sibling] is not informative in that it isn't telling the system anything it doesn't already know.
- In a system were no such transformation rule exists, (1) is informative as the system can learn something from it that it did not know before.
- In the same way, a system that doesn't know that a word can be transformed into itself, (2) [For all x, x is a brother if and only if x is a brother] is actually informative because the system can learn from that that this word transforms to itself.
- So there is no paradox here. Djvyd (talk) 21:36, 29 April 2018 (UTC)