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== Regarding pedophilia to child sexual abuse. == | |||
== CAMH Sources == | |||
Those looking over that page might notice that a few articles are heavily cited, even though they are given little weight elsewhere. This isn't was a consensus development, but the result of a determination of an editor to specifically cite CAMH sources: two papers written by four authors, all at the same facility, CAMH. For brevity, we'll call the papers F&B (Freund and Blanchard) and C,B,&B (Cantor, Blanchard, and Barbaree). This determination would also have driven the removal of references to the DSM, since the APA's established, consensus view as expressed in the DSM was in conflict with some of CAMH's conclusions. A number of the CAMH conclusions disagree with basic observations. This is why they have been largely disregarded as fringe theories in academia. | |||
'''These fringe theories include:''' | |||
A) Everyone expressing a sexual interest in diapers, but who doesn't want to be a baby, either has an incomplete form of infantilism or is hiding their desire to be a baby. (C,B,&B pg 531) That is, ] do not exist. | |||
:The DSM clearly has a section on fetishes. Few would argue that fetishes exist. WLU has already taken it upon himself to strip away all references to the ]'s sections on fetishism or general paraphilias from the diaper fetishism article. | |||
:<original research>In an AB/DL community survey, . When asked about a sense of being a baby, . 17% percent reported considering it 'Tolerable,' and 15% that it 'Must be absent.' </original research> | |||
B) Female ] don't exist.(F&B 588) That is, women who prefer women - lesbians - do not exist. | |||
:While the prevalence of lesbianism might be debated, there seems to be a clear consensus that they exist. | |||
C) Infantilism is an autoerotic form of pedophilia (C,B,&B pg 531). | |||
: The ], the widely available and widely adopted document expressing the consensus opinion of the ], groups pedophilia in section 302.2, pg 571. It also defines paraphilic infantilism as a type of masochism, section 302.83 pg 572. Thus, infantilism is not a form of pedophilia. Supporting sources already mentioned include Mattoon, pg 207; Brame, pg 137; Holmes, pg 81. This fringe theory appears to be only accepted by that one facility, CAMH. | |||
'''With additional ] from WLU, that "masochistic qynephile"=infantilist, the fringe theories also include:''' | |||
D) Infantilists ("masochistic qynephiles") are all heterosexual males or homosexual females (qyne = woman, wife). Homosexual male infantilists do not occur. | |||
:<original research> My own survey .</original research> | |||
E) All infantilists will (if complete) want to be baby girls. A pedophilic masochistic qynephile with the "erotic target location error" hypothesized would desire to be the erotic target of a pedophilic qynephile; a little girl. (pedo- child, gyne- woman, wife) | |||
:Of three examples mentioned for support in F&B, one wanted to be a boy of 10, and the other two were unspecified. This fringe view does not even hold true of the author's examples.) | |||
:<original research> My own survey .</original research> | |||
'''These fringe theories, and the papers advocating them, should not be included.''' | |||
1: Per the Fringe theories guideline: "]." Since this is not an article on these fringe theories but on paraphilic infantilism, the fringe theories may only be mentioned if connected by independent sources. C, B, B, and F are all colleagues: C, B(lanchard), &B is not independent of F&B(lanchard). | |||
2: Without fudging the sources, mentioning fringe theory B would involve "pedophilia," an emotionally charged word. | |||
per MOS, "]" One facility represented by four people, two sources is not "widely used." | |||
Pedophilia should not be directly related to child sexual abuse as pedophilia is the sexual attraction to children, not the act of causing harm to them. The overall feel of this section is that a pedophile cannot behave towards a child in a protective manner and this is an ill-perceived ideal based on stereotype. | |||
3: Regarding fringe theory C, the C,B,&B paper only cites the one paper by F&B. As detailed in the essay on "Party and Person," , and so C,B,&B is primary in this regard. | |||
It's the same as saying everyone who thinks about suicide kills themselves. | |||
4: Also regarding fringe theory C; The text of F&B was so ambiguous that WLU thought "Freund & Blanchard explicitly states that the sexual focus is only superficially similar and discusses what distinguishes a pedophile from an infantilist (which they term masochistic gynaephile)." until it was pointed out to him that his reading of F&B differed from the one presented in C, B. &B. | |||
] (]) 16:59, 14 February 2014 (UTC) | |||
5: F&B is structured around novel categories labeled with neologisms. Neologisms ] In particular, it does not use the term "paraphilic infantilism." Attempts to use C,B,&B to conclude that one or more specific neologisms is infantilism are ], since C,B,&B doesn't state which neologism(s) was intended to replace paraphilic infantilism, and so mean(s) the same thing. The assumption that it was the category that is least out-of-line from the DSM ("masochistic qynephile") is just that - an assumption. | |||
I don't think pedophilia has any relevance or should be mentioned in this article at all. Saying something is "not" something doesn't really belong. Paraphilic infantilism is not driving a monster truck, either. But we don't need to say it in the article. Sure, there may be some idiots out there who commonly confuse paraphilic infantilism with driving monster trucks, but I do not see that we cater on wikipedia in an article to saying everything under a sun something is not. You do not define something by listing out everything it is *not*, but rather, what it is. Move to delete reference to pedophilia as having nothing to do with the article. ] (]) 07:18, 22 May 2014 (UTC) | |||
6: C,B,&B cites Malitz and Tuchman & Lachman to support "There have also been reports of individuals ... who express no desire to seem like an infant (Malitz, 1966, Tuchman & Lachman, 1964)" However, they both mentioned regression. Malitz: "Dynamically the patient's diaper appeared to symbolize a regression to infancy in order to reclaim the attention and love of his mother and to undo his displacement in her affections by his sister's birth." Tuchman & Lachman conclude "The regressive quality and symbolism of the behavior pattern suggest a schizophrenic mechanism." When challenged on this point, James Cantor commented only on the typography on the challenge, not the sexology. (Pate comments that neither Malitz's nor Tuchman & Lachman's patient's said they wanted to be a baby. While both authors mentioned regressive themes, neither documented the patient saying that he wanted to be a baby.) | |||
:Since paraphilic infantilism is commonly confused with pedophilia, so commonly confused with it, apparently, that ] address the matter, it is ] (very appropriate) that ] (]) 07:29, 22 May 2014 (UTC) | |||
7: C,B,&B intermixes psychosexual infantilism (Stekel) and paraphilic infantilism (defined by the DSM). Most cases of psychosexual infantilism did not involve either diapers or babyhood. While reasonable before the publication of DSM IIIR, modern sources should observe this distinction. IIIR was the first to include a definition of paraphilic infantilism, and was published in 1987. | |||
::I have changed "infantilism is not related to pedophilia, or any other form of child sexual abuse" to "infantilism is not related to pedophilia, or any form of child sexual abuse", because the word "other" implied that pedophilia is a form of child abuse which it is not. ] (]) 13:34, 14 May 2016 (UTC) | |||
8: CAMH has editor(s?) on it's payroll promoting themselves and CAMH interests on Misplaced Pages. Only one of these is (or at least was) open about his financial conflict of interest, and then only after it was discovered by another editor. Relevant to this article, he argued for removing references to the DSM from this article and suggested his own writings and an alternative . This opened the door for his own writing to be cited in this article NINE times, even though it conflicted with the established consensus opinion, expressed in the DSM. | |||
::"Commonly confused" by ''who'', exactly? | |||
::First, this appears to be a straight-forward example of ], as it is effectively the same as vaguely declaring that "some are said to believe", "many people say", "x has been described as y", etc. But, '''who''' exactly are these people who confuse paraphilic infantilism with pedophilia, how common is "common", and most importantly, '''why''' is their confusion and misconceptions credible or noteworthy? | |||
::I'm also reminded of the phase ]; from a movement in which unscientific opinions were suggested to be given comparable weight and credibility as scientific fact. And yet, if we look at the ], it should be noted that there is no mention of the pseudo-scientific theory of intelligent design outside of the very last paragraph of the last section, concerning "Social and Cultural Responses". | |||
::In my view that approach is appropriate, because it is not the role of an encyclopedia to imbue all ideas with equal weight, but instead to primarily present objective facts and credible viewpoints from verifiable sources. | |||
::Finally, on top of the fact that there is no credible or verifiable association between paraphilic infantilism and pedophilia, the label of "pedophile" itself is an ]. These kinds of labels, especially when misapplied, can do real damage to the health and safety of people as well as the ability for society at large to understand and discuss the true diversity or human experience. | |||
::It's for these reasons that I also strongly argue to remove the vague and dubious references to pedophilia from this article as being totally irrelevant and given undue weight compared to objective facts and credible, modern and verifiable viewpoints. | |||
::(If anything, "teaching the controversy" in which paraphilic infantilism is confused with pedophilia should be relegated to a specific section of the article. But only if there is a legitimate and reasonable basis to give weight to such an obvious misconception. In my view it's long past due that those who want to include references to pedophilia in this article justify doing so with something more credible than weasel words, ''lest this very article becomes a vector for propagating this harmful and factually baseless misconception''.) ] (]) 08:41, 25 April 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::<small>commented added on behalf of FuwaFuwaDL <span style="font-family:Iosevka,monospace">0x]</span>→∞ (]) 12:52, 25 April 2023 (UTC)</small> | |||
It is not important but I feel that you do not understand English correctly. "infantilism is not related to paedophilia, or any other form of sexual abuse of children" implies that paedophilia is a form of child abuse, which is not contrary to the usual understanding of the matter, so the sentence could remain in this form. To imply that infantilism is a form of child abuse you would have to write "paedophilia is not related to infantilism, or any other form of sexual abuse of children". <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 23:37, 10 July 2016 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
Alternatives to the promotion of all of this fringe, uncertainly, and baggage, have been proposed and ignored. ] (]) 03:02, 12 November 2011 (UTC) | |||
:Your own unpublished studies are unreliable. | |||
:Your own opinion is only as good as anyone who agrees with your points. To date I don't believe anyone has. | |||
:Several editors have agreed that the DSM doesn't discuss infantilism in the sense used on this page. | |||
:Bringing up Cantor's own editing history on wikipedia is meaningless since he's not responsible for any of the recent changes. | |||
:Claiming something is a fringe theory doesn't make it a fringe theory. There is a paucity of research on paraphilic infantilism so we can essentially use whatever is scholarly and available to expand the page. To demonstrate something is a fringe theory, it requires you to demonstrate that ''other experts'', not editors, disagree with it or criticize it for being overused. | |||
:You're misapplying wikpedia policies. ] applies to new articles. The use of homonyms in an article is allowable if supported by reliable sources. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 23:54, 3 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::Since you are the one edit warring to include the fringe theory, the burden to find independent sources is on you. Per the Fringe theories guideline: "]." That is a direct quote. I strongly suspect you would have added any non-CAMH sources to support your pet fringe theory if you had any. Why would you withhold them if you had them? | |||
::Stop pointing fingers. Stop making false accusations. Time to put up or shut up. ] (]) 00:11, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::How do you know it is a fringe theory? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 00:36, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::If you can't find even one non-CAMH source that supports or even seriously discusses the CAMH theory, it is a fringe theory. Clearly, you can't, so clearly, it is. ] (]) 01:13, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::There's very little research, publications and general scientific literature on paraphilic infantilism. There are no real alternatives, or even a mainstream orthodoxy on it. There is no "mainstream view" that CAMH is "fringe" to that I'm aware of. These are peer reviewed works published in mainstream journals, or by mainstream publishing houses - respected venues that are considered quite orthodox. They are works by scholars writing in their own areas of expertise. They definitely meet the criteria for being reliable sources. There has been no criticisms raised in any reliable publishing venues that I've seen. A theory like ] is clearly fringe, and there are lots of texts that point out it is not a real thing, it's a moral panic - "moral panic" is the orthodoxy, "killing babies for the devil" is the fringe theory; the former clearly outweigh the latter in both respectability of sources and number of texts that take this view. The same for ] - there are a minority of participants who promote it, and a large, large number of legal and psychiatric scholars who criticize it. Where are the critical sources for CAMH's publications? | |||
:::::It doesn't look like these documents and theories meet the criteria to be a ]. It looks like you personally disagree with what they say, and thus wish them removed. That is not appropriate. And even if they were a fringe theory, removal is not appropriate. Instead, we would briefly summarize what they said, then immediately after point to the criticisms made in other, more respected and more voluminous sources. Fringe theories are not labelled as such because of editor beliefs, they are labelled as such by other sources. WP:FRINGE pretty clearly states that reliability and peer reviews are thresholds that fringe theories generally fall below. The publications you are removing pass those thresholds. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 02:06, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::::The DSM, the consensus document of the American Psychiatric Association, categorizes infantilism as a type of masochism (pg 572 in 4TR). Given how long you've been edit warring over the DSM, I'd suggest reading it. If you'd like to fix those other articles, be my guest. Now stop trying to divert the discussion. | |||
::::::Claiming that there is "very little research" doesn't justify pushing your version here. Do you have independent sources or not? If not, the fringe theory doesn't belong here. ] (]) 02:42, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I have read the pages of the DSM, I have photocopies of all 6 relevant pages and infantilism only appears once as a behaviour of masochism. That aspect is dealt with on the main page. As numerous editors have said - the DSM doesn't discuss infantilism that way. Saying it does doesn't make it so. This was discussed and addressed ]. Myself, {{user|WhatamIdoing}}, {{user|FiachraByrne}}, {{user|James Cantor}} and {{user|FuFoFuEd}} disagreed with you. Nobody agreed with you. | |||
:::::::Claiming something is a fringe theory doesn't make it so. Fringe theories are demonstrated by reliable sources being critical of the theories. If it is genuinely a fringe theory, please present reliable sources that criticize it. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 13:23, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Six pages? In February you were edit warring to cite fourty seven pages. Were you wrong then, wrong now, or both times? | |||
::::::::Stop trying to distract from the fact that you don't have any independent sources to support the fringe theory you are pushing. As I've clearly stated, there is a consensus view, published by the APA, which contradicts your fringe theory. Longtime buddies and editors with conflicts of interest are not a substitute for independent sources. Gangs are not a substitute for independent sources. Votestacking is not a substitute for independent sources. Claiming support from others who aren't supporting you is not a substitute for independent sources. As the edit history clearly shows, you are the ONLY ONE pushing this fringe view here. | |||
::I've added a reference to a new (2019) study indicating that there is no correlation between infantilism and pedophilic interests. I've also removed the language "infantilism is commonly confused with pedophilia" from the introduction (where no source was cited) and revised it in the main text (where the source cited was from 1991). If the article were to assert that this confusion is common, I'd think it would have to cite a more recent source to show that the confusion remains commmon. Otherwise there is a problem with ]. The current policy on ] doesn't appear to address this issue. ] (]) 16:53, 9 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Per the Fringe theories guideline: "]." You don't have independent sources for the fringe theory you are trying to push, so it should go. ] (]) 14:44, 4 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::. Per ], we should not be basing content on some new primary source study. And we include historical views, such as ]'s. Whether such views should be regulated to the "History" section is something to consider. Either way, without your addition, the article is already clear that paraphilic infantilism is not the same thing as pedophilia. As for citing that the confusion is common, which it clearly is and is why you felt the need to add the study you added, I will see about sourcing that with a newer WP:MEDRS-compliant source later on. ] (]) 03:55, 10 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::What source contains this view published by the APA? | |||
:::::::::"Independent" means not published by the subjects themselves (i.e. not ]). is published by ]. is published in the peer-reviewed ''British Journal of Psychiatry''. All of the sources are thus independent and bear the imprimatur of the publisher, the ''de facto'' approval of the editorial and peer reviewers, particularly in the absence of a withdrawal or criticism by other scholars. This is why the publications and opinions expressed therein are not considered fringe theories. I have ] the opinion more specifically to Blanchard, Freund, Cantor & Howard as it is a proposed theory rather than the general consensus. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:49, 5 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::] Blanchard et al is not independent from Blanchard et al. | |||
::::::::::Again, please actually read the DSM, pg 572 of 4th TR ed. You will clearly see infantilism defined under the heading of masochism, not pedophilia as claimed by the fringe theory. ] (]) 06:03, 6 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::] is about self-published and primary sources as they apply to people, businesses and cities discussing themselves in a self-promoting manner. It doesn't apply to scholarly sources. The DSM has been discussed repeatedly. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 11:45, 6 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::] is about INDEPENDENT sources, thus the title "Independent Sources.", which Blanchard et al and Blanchard et al are not. Blanchard in particular has an interested perspective in how Blanchard's fringe theory is described. Feel free to point out any policy, guideline, or essay that supports your position. I've quoted a number of policies. Perhaps it is you whom no one agrees with. The DSM simply and clearly contradicts the fringe view you are pushing. Since you continue to ask about it as if you had no familiarity with it (eg "What source contains this view published by the APA?"), I continue to mention it, hoping that you will actually read it after all theses months. ] (]) 14:07, 6 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
{{od}}Independent sources are those subject to independent scrutiny (i.e. peer review) and publication. This is met by any article published in a peer reviewed journal or a scholarly press book as all of Blanchard, Freund, Cantor and Barbaree's works cited here are. Blanchard may indeed have an interest in how his theory is published and summarized, but that doesn't mean he has control over publication - if his ideas were not considered respected or supported, the peer review process or editor would not publish it. Quoting a policy doesn't mean it applies correctly. I've posted a notice at the ]. | |||
:::: (1) There are a lot of primary sources in the reference list of the article currently, the ] policy on primary sources not withstanding. If this article can cite a case study, I don't see why it can't cite a survey study with over a thousand subjects. Is there a suitably neutral way of including the finding in Fuss et al. somewhere in this article? Perhaps a direct quotation? | |||
The DSM issue was discussed and closed, for the second time I will point to it: ]. If you are claiming the APA source that portrays the "consensus view" on paraphilic infantilism is the DSM, you are wrong and your interpretation has never been supported by any other editor. | |||
:::: (2) I really think the paragraph on Money's views in the "pedophilia" section has to be removed or modified. As written, it is making a speculative allegation about diaper fetishists, using the word "may," that would be ] per se if said about a named individual. Can the claim about diaper fetishists be removed from this paragraph, leaving behind the unproblematic comment about Money's view of infantilism? | |||
Blanchard, Freund, Cantor and Barbaree's works are not fringe theories. You have provided no reliable sources to substantiate this assertion, merely your own opinion. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:54, 6 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::: (3) Consider "sometimes confused" rather than "commonly confused" if a neutral, recent source can't be found. ] (]) 06:14, 10 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
:WLU wriote "If you are claiming the APA source that portrays the "consensus view" on paraphilic infantilism is the DSM, you are wrong and your interpretation has never been supported by any other editor." So James Cantor is now no longer an editor? He did use the DSM in that way. ] (]) 03:12, 8 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::I'm not sure why you are bringing up a single edit on a different page by an editor from three years ago as if it had any bearing on this discussion. Particularly when that editor has not ventured an explicit opinion here. You may however, be interested in his more recent opinion . So drop it then? Even assuming he didn't make a simple error in citation three years ago, his opinion now is obviously different. And irrelevant. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 11:24, 8 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::To promote that CAMH theory as anything other than a fringe view in opposition to the widely published consensus, you need to get the DSM dismissed as irrelevant. That edit shows that even an editor on the CAMH payroll thought the DSM WAS relevant. As for that quote, you might actually want to read it. He mentions categorizing infantilism as "paraphilia NOS (not otherwise specified)", NOT pedophilia. The fringe theory that you are pushing categorizes it as a type of pedophilia. '''Not even the person you are quoting agrees with you.''' Perhaps you are the one who should "drop it"? ] (]) 14:35, 8 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::No, edit shows that James Cantor doesn't think the DSM's mention of the word "infantilism" is relevant, and Blanchard and Freund ''distinguish'' pedophilia from paraphilic infantilism. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:57, 8 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::So you are arguing that Cantor is inconsistent, first using the DSM to define infantilism and then waffling and citing his own new text? Not the best position, given that CB&B is the only source you are claiming for support that doesn't require WP:SYNTH in equating some particular neologism off a list and infantilism. F&B doesn't even use the word 'infantilism' once. ] (]) 03:11, 9 December 2011 (UTC) | |||
=== RS/N summary === | |||
Some relevant quotes from a now-archived discussion about these sources. | |||
*AerobicFox:"This source has a variety of WP:REDFLAGs, the preface of this textbook states "it is aimed primarily at graduate students taking a first course in adultpsychopathology ... chapter authors were ''given considerable latitude''"(emph mine). The chapter author of this particular chapter, Ray Blanchard, sources this theory to his own published work in 1993.". | |||
*Fifelfoo:"MEDRS applies. Freund 1993 is a PRIMARY in terms of medical research, it is the first proposal of a theory, and therefore unreliable. Cantor 2009 would be a secondary, but I consider it tainted by association with an author who proposes the theory. Cantor 2009 can be used if independent secondary studies published in appropriate medical forums attest to the uptake of this medical theory. Until someone can demonstrate this, the text should be removed from the article as unverifiable due to failing to meet MEDRS." | |||
*(Elinruby also commented, but stated not having examined the sources.) | |||
The discussion itself was stretched out to twelve thousand words, perhaps expecting that fatigue would prevent others from becoming involved in the article, or doing more than just expressing their concerns on the noticeboard. Sadly, this effect was apparently achieved. ] (]) 06:01, 30 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::(diff to longtime supporter who didn't comment at RS/N, added by WLU) | |||
:* ] | |||
:* ] | |||
:* ] | |||
:That's an extremely selective summary. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 22:40, 30 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::WLU, thanks for demonstrating that my summary of the RS/N (the reliable sources noticeboard) discussion was impartial. Had I left out anything that supported your position, you would have linked directly to it. As it is, you just threw up links to entire discussions at the fringe theories noticeboard, including one extremely partial diff. Are you aware that Misplaced Pages has multiple noticeboards, and that the fringe theories noticeboard is not the reliable sources noticeboard? ] (]) 01:13, 31 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::These sources were questioned in ], but there were no specific comments on the applicability of the sources.] (]) 21:41, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Yes, there are a lot of primary sources in the article. And when someone has argued that regarding other articles, my response has been that existing poor sources and/or content does not mean that it is okay to add more poor sources and/or poor content. Furthermore, primary-sourced content based on older sources is much more likely to be covered in secondary and/or tertiary academic sources than a primary source from the current year is. I haven't edited this article much, but if I ever get around to doing so, it would include replacing the primary sources with secondary and tertiary sources where possible without losing important content. I might need to do that even if I'd rather not take the time to do it; this is so that the article adheres to WP:MEDRS as best it can (which may sometimes mean retaining a primary source here and there, per ]), to help keep out poor or ] content. If there is any content in the article that falls under WP:Fringe, we should consider how best to present that material or to remove it. But when it comes to early/historical sexological views, even if they are fringe, we should include those in some way. For example, Money's Lovemap theory is something we should cover. I the aforementioned Money text from "states" to "argued." I think that with the ] and the use of "argued" and "may," it's clear that this is Money's opinion. It's not presented as fact. It seems to fit in that section because the sentence briefly addresses sexual attraction to diaper-wearing babies, and it doesn't seem he was referring to people with that attraction being sexually oriented toward adults in any way. ] (]) 01:30, 11 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
== File:Adult baby.jpg Nominated for Deletion == | |||
:::::: I take your point about adding further primary sources. The paragraph on Money needed further editing. As written, the passage suggested that Money thought that (some? all?) diaper fetishists "may be" nepiophiles. That is a shocking accusation, bordering on libel, if he indeed took that view. I was not able to find the Money book cited in this passage, but I was able to find Money's definition of "autonepiophilia" in ''Lovemaps'' (p. 259). There, he defines the terms "autonepiophilia" and "nepiophilia" without saying anything about diaper fetishists. I've edited the passage on Money so that it makes no mention of diaper fetishists. I trust this is OK, since diaper fetishism is not the topic of this article. ] (]) 02:06, 11 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
{| | |||
:::::::With edit, you removed the "Money argued" piece. If he did argue that diaper fetishists may be sexually attracted to diaper-wearing babies, that is his argument and would still be his argument even if in the ] article. Whether or not to include the material is not a matter of ]. Unless speaking of libel in terms of some ] matter, libel has nothing to do with how we write Misplaced Pages articles; see, for example, ]. Diaper fetishism is a related topic, which is why it's mentioned in the lead and there is a section on it in this article. The Money bit you removed can go there, where Money is already mentioned. ] (]) 03:13, 11 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| An image used in this article, ], has been nominated for deletion at ] in the following category: ''Deletion requests January 2012'' | |||
;What should I do? | |||
''Don't panic''; a discussion will now take place over on Commons about whether to remove the file. This gives you an opportunity to contest the deletion, although please review Commons guidelines before doing so. | |||
* If the image is ] then you may need to upload it to Misplaced Pages (Commons does not allow fair use) | |||
* If the image isn't freely licensed and there is no ] then it cannot be uploaded or used. | |||
:::::::But, yes, without being sure if he made the argument and since the piece is not vital, we can leave it out. ] (]) 03:21, 11 October 2019 (UTC) | |||
|} | |||
== Infantilist found guilty of kidnap, rape and torture of child == | |||
== Ongoing ownership issues == | |||
In light of the David Challenor case<ref>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/coventry-captive-girl-attic-torture-den-david-challenor-coventry-a8502991.html</ref> should the sentence | |||
While I'm neutral about a recent edit by an IP, I would have tended to keep it as a good faith edit, and to encourage new contributors. (Well, after removing the one extra coma for a coma-separated list, or switching the other comas to semicolons, that is.) WLU's version of the article could benefit from improvements by others: Improvements which won't occur if he continues to demonstrate a sense of ] by reverting changes by others. This has been brought up before. WLU's only response was to make accusations on another board, accusations that he then need to retract because they were based on assumptions of ill will.) | |||
"Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and infantilists do not seek children as sexual partners." | |||
WLU's given motivation for quickly reverting back to his own version, "they'd be diaper lovers, not infantilists", is not valid. The nearby link to diaper lovers redirects to the ] article, which defines it as "a sexual fetish." Those who "enjoy the diapers in a non-sexual way, and do not identify as adult babies" would then not be simply grouped as diaper fetishists. | |||
not be amended to read | |||
WLU, I believe it is time you stepped back and let others edit. ] (]) 05:25, 30 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:The IP made an edit without a source and the nearest source to it doesn't verify the text. I removed it per ]. I've never seen this "fifth type" mentioned in the sources. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 22:57, 30 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::WLU, you wrote then that you removed it because "they'd be diaper lovers, not infantilists", with no mention of WP:PROVEIT. Yesterday you wrote that the reversion was due to categorization, and today you write that it was due to sourcing. So is the reason you gave initially untrue? Or is the reason you are giving now - or both reasons - untrue? What is the real reason you reverted back to your own version? WP:AGF doesn't apply when an editor is offering multiple, contradictory justifications for his actions. We can't assume your good faith. You reverted another editor's good-faith edit and are now waffling on your justification. Again, I believe it is time you stepped back and let others edit. ] (]) 01:36, 31 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::Please note ] about WLU's ownership issues.] (]) 22:24, 25 March 2012 (UTC) | |||
"Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and infantilists do not ''normally'' seek children as sexual partners." | |||
== Fruend and Blanchard's Paedophilia article doesn't belong here == | |||
I'm hesitant to edit the article as I don't know if someone is actively managing it and whether this would require some additional information on how different paraphilias can be present in the same person, but I think this should be amended (especially since this is not the only conviction of an infantilist in relation to children).] (]) 14:43, 2 September 2018 (UTC) | |||
F&B's "Erotic target location errors in male gender dysphorics, paedophiles, and fetishists." is about, according to the very first line "A clinical series of male paedophiles..." The article doesn't mention "infantilism" at all. In contrast, "paedophile" or "paedophilic" occur 16 times, including the title. The article claims to be about pedophiles, not infantilists. The DSM and many, many other sources clearly differentiate between infantilism and pedophilia. Unless part of some assertion that infantilism is a form of pedophilia - an ] not supported by any independent sources - F&B doesn't belong here. ] (]) 22:15, 25 March 2012 (UTC) | |||
:Content should be based on what the literature states, not on some news headline. That stated, child molesters come from a variety of backgrounds. It is obviously incorrect to imply that an infantilist can never be sexually interested in little children. Those familiar with the literature on pedophilia and child sexual abuse topics know that it's not even the case that everyone is who has sexually abused a little kid is technically a pedophile; the ] article addresses this. So feel free to add "normally." I'm not going to revert. ] (]) 06:06, 3 September 2018 (UTC) | |||
:Since the only active editor who has ever argued for this source has made multiple edits() to the article since this was posted, I think concluding ] reasonable. ] (]) 19:21, 31 March 2012 (UTC) | |||
::All this conversation does is prove just how completely out-of-place, and potentially loaded, the above sentence is. | |||
:Now that F&B have been removed, let's discuss Dickey: This letter to the editor makes a similarly exceptional claim, of "autopedophilia," but uses entirely different terminology. It mentions neither infantilism nor F&B (even though Dickey and Blanchard of F&B work for the same facility). It refers to no other "autopedophilia" sources, and so is primary. Finally, as a letter to the editor, it isn't peer-reviewed. ] (]) 20:10, 31 March 2012 (UTC) | |||
::Any category of person, or member of any group, has the ''possibility'' of being a pedophile (or a rapist, murderer, or on the positive side, an olympic athlete, renowned artist, astronaut, etc.), but that obviously does not warrant the weight of inclusion without solid evidence of a genuine connection, correlation or causation. | |||
::I just don't want to end up in another long, pointless argument. The claim is not exceptional and the sources are acceptable. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 21:32, 1 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::For example, there have been countless documented examples of priests having sexually abused children, but if you ] you won't any reference to pedophilia, or other such value-laden language to that effect. You certainly don't see a sentence that says, "Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and priests do not ''normally'' seek children as sexual partners.". And rightly so, because even with an abundance of examples of priests having sexually abused children, it is still not considered by any rational person to be a defining feature of priesthood in general. | |||
:::Pointless arguments can be avoided by making points, WLU. For example, Aerobicfox of RSN wrote "Per ] I would like better sourcing for this claim '...infantilism is an autoerotic form of paedophilia' " on Dec 6th, just before WLU flip-flopped the text to misrepresent the sources. ] (]) 21:48, 1 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::So, again, clearing up the possibility of "confusion" is not something that should be a persistent through-line of this article (which should really be focused on accurately ''describing what paraphilic infantilism is, and not what it is not''). If anything, explaining the differences between paraphilic infantilism and pedophilia should be relegated to its own (unbiased, well-sourced and verifiable) section or article entirely. ] (]) 18:58, 25 April 2023 (UTC) | |||
::::WLU has now reverted repeatedly, apparently opting for a pointless edit war instead of discussion.] (]) 02:10, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::The claim isn't exceptional, since Freund & Blanchard are being used to clarify a distinction between pedophiles and PI (an uncontroversial claim, sexologists acknowledge that the two groups are different) and to posit an etiology when there is no widely-recognized etiology for the condition. I've repeatedly stated that "autoerotic form of pedophilia" isn't the same thing as "pedophilia", if I haven't convinced you yet then I suggest you reread any one of probably a dozen rebuttals of your similarly-repeated claim. You can find them ] and ] and ] and ], and probably on this very talk page as well. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 11:10, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Please actually read my post or the article, WLU. You might also wish to highlight any points in those discussions that support your position, instead of linkspamming in hopes of frightening people off. Another at RSN wrote "" | |||
::::::Even past-supporter FiachraByrne didn't agree with WLU's reading of F&B: "" This is why much of the text now being fought over was hidden from August to December. ] (]) 14:34, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
{{od}} | |||
* Ludwigs2 Ludwigs2 later edited the page to remove the NPOV tags . | |||
* WhatamIdoing | |||
* Elinruby | |||
* AerobicFox's more recent comment (the above diff Bittergrey used is from December 6th, this is from December 16th) | |||
The hyperfocus on the use of the word "pedophilia" while ignoring what the actual source intends is a blatant misrepresentation of the source. Freund & Blanchard use their case series to distinguish between pedophiles and infantilists, and Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree is a secondary source that also makes that distinction while clearly referencing infantilists explicitly. Claiming the DSM discusses infantilists at all is flatly wrong, which you know, and which the community has clearly stated is wrong, twice ] and ]. Why you think I'd change my mind when there's no evidence of that is beyond me. FiachraByrne's comment is distinguishing between two groups of infantilists - those who do so because of masochism and those who do so because of an erotic target location error. The full quote is: | |||
<blockquote>CB&B refer to Freund and Blanchard's 1993 article and state that, "They hypothesized that erotic target location was a basic dimension of sexual attraction, independent of the nature of the erotic target (object) itself. They interpreted infantilism as an erotic target location error for persons whose erotic target is children, that is, infantilism as an autoerotic form of pedophilia" (p.531). It would seem clear that CB&B characterise infantilism as an "erotic identity disorder" (p.530). That they wish to apply this concept as a general one across the paraphilias is obvious from their parallel treatment of transexualism (autogynaephilia) and those who self-image as amputees. Similary F&B assert that errors in erotic targeting are a basic feature of the paraphilias. They delineate a small sub-set of paedophiles who self-image as infants or children. The term they use as an analogue to gender identity disorder is "age identity disorder" and they obviously see it as structurally very similar (irrespective of the object of attraction) to the former condition. In these autoerotic disorders, they conjecture, the object of attraction becomes inverted and attached to the self. They clearly distinguish this paraphilia from what they term "masochistic gynaephiles" who although they fantasise about themselves as infants or little boys do so in fantasies involving adult women. They speculate that this group is fundamentally different from the previous one although the fantasies are similar as one use the fantasy to increase distance and difference from their sexual object (women) and the other use it to collapse difference (infants/children). As CB&B refer to infantilism as an autoerotic form of paedophilia it would seem that they consider it distinct from similar behaviour with a putatively different aetiology that is essentially masochistic.</blockquote> | |||
But really if you want to know what FiachraByrne thinks now and of the current page, you'll have to ask her. | |||
_____ | |||
If your argument is that F&B should be removed from the page, it essentially changes nothing - Cantor, Barbaree & Blanchard can be used to ] the exact same points as Freund & Blanchard's 1993 paper. The in the pedophilia section states that pedophiles are attracted to kids while infantilists are attracted to the idea of being kids. The is redundant to two other citations, one of which is Cantor, Blanchard and Barbaree, a reliable source, and merely states that infantilism has been linked to autoeroticism and autogynephilia. So by all means, remove the sources and replace them with CBB, but there is no reason to change the text. And here is the long, pointless discussion I've been wanting to avoid, but what have you. Again, nothing changes. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 17:04, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:WLU, one of those quotes is from someone who hasn't even read the sources. "...Even if the book, which I have not examined..." Two others are friends or friends of friends. If you don't have any valid points to make, you could at least be less verbose about it. I notice that you are again trying to argue for your preferred sources by arguing against the DSM, even though the DSM actually mentions infantilism, unlike the sources you are warring to use. ] (]) 17:30, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::The overall point that can be taken from this is that the questions were not cleanly resolved (or even asked). Claiming that the only people who agree with me are friends is a fairly serious accusation of bad faith and ], as well as ignoring the editing experience of those accounts and the substance of their specific comments. | |||
::I agree the DSM mentions infantilism, as a behaviour found in masochists. It is of course essentially irrelevant to this page, as indicated by the two lengthy noticeboard discussions, both of which resulted in a clear consensus that the DSM had virtually no bearing on this page, and certainly didn't discuss infantilism in detail. Cantor, Blanchard and Barbaree does mention infantilism explicitly, as well as clearly linking Freund & Blanchard's 1993 paper to paraphilic infantilism. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 18:08, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::WAID has taken your side against me ever since you took her side against me in Feb 2011, and Ludwigs2 was supportive of her for admin. I don't recall either of them showing a familiarity with the sources either. Now your turn: The RS/N post resulted in two comments by editors who were familiar with the sources. Other than the fact that they agree with me, why do you dismiss those? ] (]) 18:23, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::Many people have found your arguments unconvincing, for instance, nobody agreed with your assertion that the DSM defines paraphilic infantilism (it certainly doesn't distinguish between paraphilic infantilism and pedophilia, though Freund & Blanchard as well as Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree do). Nobody thought the link to the understanding infantilism website was worth including. As I've said before, WAID and I have a very similar understanding of the policies and guidelines but the same could be said of most experienced editors here. There's only so many times you can accuse people who agree with me of being biased by some sort of personal relationship before it starts looking like your interpretation is simply wrong. | |||
::::I could ask you the same question - you've ignored the input of many people who have disagreed with you, you completely gloss over Elinruby's comment, as well as AerobicFox's later comment. It's extremely difficult to tease out any consensus from any of those discussions since they are so clogged with irrelevant tangents - for instance, my motivation and alleged flipflopping. If you left out those accusations, discussions would be shorter, you would have more engagement from other editors and things would be a lot more civil. I make an effort to base discussions around policies, guidelines and sources rather than motivations. When I say "the policy on fringe theories suggests this is an alternative theoretical formulation, not pseudoscience" and your reply is that I'm biased and my comment should be ignored, you're completely ignoring the fact that I'm substantively discussing a policy, not any motivation. | |||
::::Your comment about "familiarity with sources" is also problematic - knowing how to identify a reliable source is completely different from being familiar with its content. Determining whether a source is reliable based on its content rather than its author and publisher is a pretty big mistake. I can pretty quickly and easily determine whether a source is reliable or not without having read a word of it. Basing pages on reliable sources means sometimes we have to put up with page content we personally disagree with, so long as it is reliably sourced. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 18:51, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::According to two comments RSN already quoted, those sources aren't sufficiently reliable for the exceptional claim. Regarding your boast about determining a sources reliability without reading a word of it, I have to disagree. A tertiary discussion of Einstein's theory of relatively might be generally reliable, but not a reliable source for a particular topic that it doesn't discuss. F&B doesn't discuss infantilism, and so is irrelevant. You might wish to actually read it.] (]) 19:33, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Of course, Ludwigs2 and Elinruby both suggested that CB&B is reliable for the claims made. And F&B does discuss infantilism, even if it doesn't use the exact wording - CB&B is evidence of this. And, AerobicFox's December 6th comment is really rather irrelevant considering his December 16th comment makes it clear that ten days later he changed his mind and considered the sources sufficiently reliable - your selective citation of one opinion while ignoring the other is ]. Not to mention that we can replace the two uses of F&B with CB&B without issue but you didn't replace the citation, you removed the text. And, discussion with AerobicFox and other editors indicated they didn't understand the point being made - that the "autoerotic form of pedophilia" isn't the same thing as pedophilia, a point you don't even acknowledge. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 20:08, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::If there is some nuance that nobody but you understands, WLU, that would be a great reason NOT to have it in a Misplaced Pages article, since if the sources don't explain it, it is ]. ] (]) 20:20, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::CB&B does explain all the points sourced to the F&B article you removed. Do you agree to replacing the text using CB&B instead of F&B? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 22:40, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::At RSN, WLU wrote If "everyone" who reads the sources "misses" their support for a particular point, that seems clear evidence that the point isn't adequately supported. Whether WP:SYNTH or WP:OR, it should go. WLU is still asserting that infantilism is a form of pedophilia, and edit waring to cite a paper based on "A clinical series of male paedophiles..." (F&B, first sentence) and no reference to infantilism to do it. ] (]) 23:43, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Actually, not everyone missed that. WhatamIdoing noticed it, Elinruby noticed it, and Ludwigs2 noticed it (in that he didn't argue for the removal of the source). We can get a request for comment if you'd like, it's not a particularly intuitive paper but it's pretty obvious what the overall purpose is. | |||
::::::::::Regards edit warring, I'm perfectly willing to cite CB&B since it's obviously about infantilism. If your objection is that the F&B paper doesn't use the term, we can use CB&B to cite the exact same ideas. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::WLU, you are the one that wrote "everyone.". If we discard F&B, then CB&B will be ] at best, claiming that F&B is about infantilism even though F&B doesn't mention infantilism. F&B claim to be about pedophilia. ] require "multiple high-quality sources" - not one contradictory source.] (]) 00:05, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::CB&B will never be primary. If you claim CB&B is primary, then you misunderstand the policy. The claim that paraphilic infantilists do not want to have sex with children is not an exceptional claim, as several other sources corroborate it (Ardnt, 1991; Holmes & Holmes, 2008; Money, 1997 and of course, Freund & Blanchard and Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree simply make this point in a different way). Within the theory of erotic target location error, autoerotic pedophilia is at one end of a continuum, and pedophilia is at the other. An infantilist, theorized as having the autoerotic form of pedophilia, desires a transformed self, not a child sexual partner. A pedophile wants to rape children. The point is made in both sources. | |||
::::::::::::Cantor, Blachard & Barbaree, using the term "infantilism", make the point that paraphilic infantilists are on the opposite end of the erotic target continuum as pedophiles and are therefore not pedophiles. Not an extreme claim, actually a distinguishing claim. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 10:30, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::WLU, you've once again flip-flopped from actual content to a politically correct textbyte. If F&B doesn't mention infantilism, then CB&B's claim that F&B was about infantilism (in spite of not mentioning it) would be new to CB&B: That is, it would be PRIMARY. The extraordinary claim, which you seem to have suddenly forgotten in spite of including it even in the text you quoted at AN/3RR, is that infantilism is some form of pedophilia. F&B never mentions infantilism, only making frequent mention of being about pedophiles. ] (]) 13:25, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
{{od}}Yeah, this is why I consider engaging with you on a talk page to be virtually worthless. CB&B is not a primary source, and CB&B and F&B both make it clear that infantilists are not pedophiles. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 13:39, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:WLU, please skip the ]. You have the option of walking away any time you wish. I've supported my position with quotes from the sources and input from RSN. If this discussion seems pointless, it is because you haven't raised any to support your position. Like ], you never showed any interest in this article before you ]. Perhaps it is time you left me and these topics alone. ] (]) 14:03, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::You are also free to walk away. You've supported your position with selective quotes from other editors, partial summaries of noticeboard discussions and misrepresentations of sources (for instance, that the DSM discusses infantilism and that Freund & Blanchard think infantilists are pedophiles). And you've been ignoring the substance of my comments in favour of attacks on my motivations for as long as we've been interacting. So trust that I also find this frustrating, I find these pointless, sprawling, ugly discussions irritating, but my comments are not ad hominen, I consider them scrupulously accurate. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 14:39, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::No, WLU, since you are ], I can't go away. ] (]) 14:58, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::Please note new ]. ] (]) 14:58, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Feel free to bring up my behaviour at the appropriate venue, it's irrelevant here. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:01, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::You're the one who brought up personal behaviors: "Yeah, this is why I consider engaging with you on a talk page to be virtually worthless". ] (]) 15:15, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::]? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:17, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
== Input regarding use of sources == | |||
== A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion == | |||
Is the following text adequately sourced by the attached sources? | |||
The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion: | |||
{{cquote|In 1993 sexologists ] and ] published and discussed a series of ] involving infantilists<sup>(1)</sup> and noted a distinction between them and pedophiles. While pedophiles were attracted to children (and objects related to childhood) due to the desire for a child sexual partner, infantilists imagined themselves as children and adopted the objects of childhood or infancy to increase the power difference between themselves and their preferred sexual partners of adult women, with whom they acted out masochistic fantasies.<sup>(2)</sup>}} | |||
* ]<!-- COMMONSBOT: speedy | 2023-03-01T07:08:13.325083 | Adult baby wearing child attire.jpg --> | |||
{{cquote|An additional theory is that infantilism is an erotic identity disorder where the erotic fantasy is centered on the self rather than on a sexual partner and results from an erotic targeting location error where the erotic target was children yet becomes inverted. According to this model, proposed by Ray Blanchard and Kurt Freund in 1993, infantilism is a sexual attraction to the idea of the self being a child.<sup>(1)}} | |||
You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —] (]) 07:08, 1 March 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Petition to remove, replace or localize value-laden, inaccurate, biased or otherwise dated terminology. == | |||
* (1) {{cite book|chapter=Sexual Disorders | author = ] | coauthors = ]; Barbaree H | title = Oxford Textbook of Psychopathology|editor=Blaney PH & Millon T | edition = 2nd | year = 2009 | location = New York & Oxford|publisher=]|isbn=9780195374216|pages=}} | |||
* (2) {{cite pmid | 8481752 }}] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 20:06, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
I would like us to examine and discuss '''the use of various terms used in this article, and whether they are appropriate in the context of our modern understanding of paraphilic infantilism as well as paraphilias and atypical sexual interests in general'''. For example: | |||
:Actually, as has been pointed out repeatedly, there are THREE affected locations. The third reads "...or as a form of autoeroticism analogous to Ray Blanchard's concept of autogynephilia as applied in certain cases of gender identity disorder...." | |||
:* {{cite journal|last=Dickey|first=Robert|title=Commentary on "Adult Baby Syndrome" by Evcimen and Gratz (2006) (letter to the editor)|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |year=2007|volume=36|pages=131–2|doi=10.1007/s10508-006-9148-x}} | |||
:Please note that all of these authors are colleagues at CAMH, and so all of these sources are ]. ] (]) 21:35, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
1 - The word "syndrome" as used in "Adult Baby Syndrome". According to the as ''"n. a set of symptoms and signs that are usually due to a single cause (or set of related causes) and together indicate a particular physical or mental disease or disorder.".'' However, as of the ], the psychological consensus draws a clear and intention distinction between ''paraphilias'' (as a benign, but atypical sexual desire) and ''paraphilic disorders'' (as stress, impairment, or personal harm to the self or others as the result of paraphilias). Connecting those two dots makes it very clear that paraphilias like paraphilic infantilism are not in and of themselves to be considered a mental disease or psychological disorder--rendering the term "Adult Baby Syndrome" archaic, obsolete and potentially misleading in the context of the lead section. | |||
2 - Similarly, the word "condition" as used in the section header "Relation to other conditions", may also evoke the concept of paraphilia being a "medical condition. Though admittedly this point is debatable, as "condition" is a fairly broad term on its own. | |||
Cross-posted requests for input to ] and ]. | |||
3 - As eluded to in the article itself, the term "psychosexual infantilism" is extremely archaic, has changed over time, and is fundamentally less descriptive than the term "paraphilic infantilism". Not only is "physchosexual infantilism" a virtually unused term in modern research or ABDL subculture context, neither Freud's (1856–1939) nor Stekel's (1868-1940) use of the term is consistent with the modern classification or understanding or infantilism, paraphilias, or the diversity of human sexual expression in general. Thus, I'm arguing that the term "psychosexual infantilism" is only relevant in a historical context, and likely doesn't belong as one of the a.k.a.'s in the lead section. | |||
I believe the sources are adequate; to be used exactly as they are currently would require ] since reference (2) does not use the word "infantilism", but does define the key term "masochistic gynaephiles" as individuals who "habitually imagine themselves as little boys or babies" (Freund & Blanchard 1993, p. 561) - the definiton of paraphilic infantilists. Ray Blanchard is also a co-author of both the first (2009) and second (1993) sources. The 1993 source most clearly makes the distinction between pedophiles and paraphilic infantilists, making it most valuable in explicitly ]. Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree can be used for a modified version of the above. The actual statement from Cantor et al (2008) page is "''erotic fantasies of persons with erotic identity disorders pertain less to any sexual partners and more to their transformed images of themselves; some authors refer to these paraphilias as autoerotic... interpreted infantilism as an erotic target location error for persons whose erotic target is children, that is, infantilism as an autoerotic form of pedophilia.''" Within the theory of "erotic target location errors", that places pedophilia on opposite ends of a spectrum; on one end are pedophiles (who are sexually attracted to children and desire children as sexual partners). On the other end are paraphilic infantilists (who are sexually attracted to the idea of being, and being treated like an infant, and desire adult sexual partners who treat them like children). Both sources clearly distinguish pedophiles from paraphilic infantilists, even if their wording is unclear to those not familiar with the theory of erotic target location errors. | |||
There may be other ways in which terminology can be clarified or improved, but I want to stress my general belief that it's both important and socially responsible that the terms used by Misplaced Pages to discuss sensitive topics adequately reflect the modern day understanding and consensus, otherwise we run the risk of further perpetuating historical systemic biases. ] (]) 00:30, 27 April 2023 (UTC) | |||
This has been discussed, at length, repeatedly, before (], ], ], ], and ], which started this morning and lead to this post at the suggestion of ). ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 20:06, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:4 - The use of "gone wrong" or "errors" here are both further examples of value-laden and biased terminology. (From: "A variety of causes have been proposed, including altered lovemaps, imprinting gone wrong and errors in erotic targets, though there is no consensus.) These ought to be replaced with neutral language. ] (]) 00:49, 5 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
:As I stated in ], F&B's "Erotic target location errors in male gender dysphorics, paedophiles, and fetishists." is about, according to the very first line "A clinical series of male paedophiles..." The article doesn't mention "infantilism" at all. In contrast, "paedophile" or "paedophilic" occur 16 times, including the title. The article claims to be about pedophiles, not infantilists. The DSM and many, many other sources clearly differentiate between infantilism and pedophilia. Unless part of some assertion that infantilism is a form of pedophilia - an ] not supported by any independent sources - F&B doesn't belong here. This was the point of the discussion above. WLU, the only active editor who has ever argued for this source has made multiple edits() to the article since this was posted, I believed concluding ] reasonable. However, WLU then edit warred to force his version of the article. | |||
::5 - The sentence "Additionally, infantilists may not consider themselves as suffering from a medical condition and may not want to change their behavior, a common occurrence among individuals with paraphilias" seems to imply that infantilism is a medical condition or is a behavior that needs to be corrected or avoided. Not only is this not consistent with recent psychological consensus on paraphilias according to the DSM-5, this statement feels generally biased. ] (]) 09:34, 5 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::Quick note: I have implemented ''some'' of these changes. | |||
:::To me, it's very important that we do not introduce bias into this article by pathologizing benign sexual fetishes (as is consistent with the declassification of fetishes in the DSM-5), associating legitimate sexual expression with crime, or giving undue weight to "confusion" by disingenuously or erroneously conflating paraphilic infantilism with totally unrelated, and in some cases deeply stigmatized or taboo, sexual behaviors. | |||
:::In fact, we should take it a step further and depathologize, decriminalize and destigmatize the language in this article in favor of truly fair, accurate and neutral descriptions. | |||
:::As editors, we are not here to keep the article static and stagnant. We are here to leave it in better condition than we found it. And so, we really ought to come together to try and improve the accuracy, neutrality, verifiability and overall quality of this article, so that we can help the people in the future develop a better understanding of this paraphilia and fetishes like it. | |||
:::And not only because "knowledge is power" and the truth is important, but also because there is a ''human side'' to sexuality, fetishism, and the long history of shame and stigmatization that has lead to many past injustices. ] (]) 03:42, 9 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Criminology is not relevant to the topic. == | |||
:To summarize the past RSN discussion (the one where editors looked at the sources): | |||
:*AerobicFox:"] I would like better sourcing for this claim '...infantilism is an autoerotic form of paedophilia'. This source has a variety of WP:REDFLAGs, the preface of this textbook states 'it is aimed primarily at graduate students taking a first course in adult psychopathology ... chapter authors were ''given considerable latitude''"(emph mine). The chapter author of this particular chapter, Ray Blanchard, sources this theory to his own published work in 1993...']" | |||
:*Fifelfoo:" | |||
:*(Elinruby also commented, but stated not having examined the sources. | |||
:The more recent RSN discussion degenerated into WLU making personal accusations against me, much as the above discussion did. | |||
:One more quote from past-WLU supporter FiachraByrne, regarding F&B The largest of THREE sections of text being debated now was commented out from August to December because she didn't support that part of WLU's version. F&B was based on a sample of pedophiles. | |||
Among other issues, this article contains a line that reads, "Criminologists Stephen and Ronald Holmes believe that while there is no simple answer to the origins of infantilism, the practices may involve an element of stress reduction similar to that of transvestism." | |||
:As for myself: | |||
:A)Since F&B does't mention infantilism, it should be removed. To do otherwise would violate ] and/or ]. No reliable source defines "masochistic gynephiles" or any of F&B's other neologisms as infantilists. Please note that F&B (in 1993) could have used "infantilism" (in use since the 70's, and included in ] in 1987). '''F&B could have used the established term - infantilism - but did not.''' | |||
:B) CB&B's claim regarding F&B - that F&B considered infantilism a form of pedophilia - is an ] without exceptional sources, and so should be removed. This is even more true given it's current, weasel-worded state that arguably contradicts the source. Furthermore, if we accept that F&B doesn't mention infantilism, CB&B's claim that it does would then be primary. Some other citations to CB&B might remain, but only those that properly represent the source. | |||
:C) Finally, Dickey's letter to the editor should go, since no remaining text that it is connected with is supported by a peer-reviewed source. It is cited only in the third section, conveniently omitted by WLU: "...or as a form of autoeroticism analogous to Ray Blanchard's concept of autogynephilia as applied in certain cases of gender identity disorder...." ] (]) 20:37, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::I highly urge any interested editors to read the full set of sections or ignore them completely. Bittergrey noticeably neglects to mention opinions that disagree with his: | |||
:::* Ludwigs2 ] - the fact that there is an interpretation of this source that might offend people is not in itself sufficient grounds for removing the source. You need to show that the source is being misrepresented or misused, and to date you've failed to do so."] | |||
:::* WhatamIdoing | |||
:::* AerobicFox's statement 10 days after the one quoted above, "" | |||
:::The claim that the sources are not independent is flatly wrong, all are published in venues not controlled by the authors, making them all independent. The fact that Blanchard, who cowrote the chapter, cited the work in reference to infantilism, makes it obvious that the authors think Freund & Blanchard 1993 applies even if it doesn't use the word "infantilism". That the paper is relevant is particularly obvious since the definition of the key term "masochistic gynaephiles" is people "who habitually imagine themselves as little boys or babies in sexual fantasies involving adult women." | |||
:::Regarding FiachraByrne's statement, though a small number of pedophiles may indeed imagine they are children, please note the discussion in the paper regarding masochistic gynaephiles (who again, are people "who habitually imagine themselves as little boys or babies in sexual fantasies involving adult women") are thus: | |||
{{cquote|The above cases suggest a distinction between paedophiles with erotic imagery of themselves as children and masochistic gynaephiles with similar fantasies. This view is based on our analysis of the relationships between the infantile (or juvenile) self-imagery and the other elements of the total fantasy. With paedophiles, this imagery increases the subject's similarity to the sexual object (children). With masochistic gynaephiles, the same imagery increases the subject's difference from the sexual object (women), in particular, the difference between subject and object in power and control. This power differential, expressed in such fantasies by the imagined woman spanking or scolding the subject, is central to the masochistic arousal. A similar analysis can be applied to the fetish objects (usually nappies) used in masturbation by the two groups. With paedophiles, the fetish derives its power from its association with the sexual object, children. With masochistic gynaephiles,the fetish derives its power from association with the (fantasised) subject; it is an accoutrement to the role of the shamed, defenceless, punished little boy. In light of these differences, we believe that erotic fantasies of being a child probably have different aetiologies in the two groups.}} | |||
:::Thus while there may be a small number of pedophiles who, like paraphilic infantilists, pretend they are children, this superficial similarity is belied by the fact that the etiology and underlying motivation is completely different - pedophiles and paraphilic infantilists are different. | |||
:::And as I've said many times - Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree do not say paraphilic infantilists are pedophiles. They say that paraphilic infantilists lie on opposite ends of a continuum, the same way they theorize ] is on the opposite end of a continuum from ], and ] is on the opposite end of a continuum from ]. It's the same continuum in all cases - is the desired sexual object another person with the desired trait, or the desire for the self to be transformed. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 22:27, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::To the contrary, WLU, you've edit warred to include the text "infantilism is an autoerotic form of paedophilia."(quote is from the last altered section) in the article. You flip-flopped on Dec 6th, during the RSN discussion. You grieved "One thing that ''everyone'' seems to miss here, is that "autoerotic pedophilia" is not the same thing as "pedophilia"." It seems more likely that "everyone " understands correctly, and that you alone do not. If you are finally willing to accept that F&B's paper, based on " clinical series of male paedophiles..." wasn't about infantilism, we can get rid of that source. F&B had the option of using the then-established term, infantilism, and chose not to. ] (]) 23:02, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Does the page currently say that paraphilic infantilism is a form of pedophilia? Did I not say I wanted a different wording back in ]? Did I not change the wording on ? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 23:11, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::As already noted, the text was weasel-worded to mean pretty much the opposite of what it meant before; the opposite of what the source says. The text should have been removed, as I have tried to. ] (]) 23:37, 3 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::The sources are accurately summarized as distinguishing pedophiles from paraphilic infantilists, I don't know how anyone can read the sections and quotes I've included ("''The above cases suggest a distinction between paedophiles with erotic imagery of themselves as children and masochistic gynaephiles with similar fantasies...we believe that erotic fantasies of being a child probably have different aetiologies in the two groups.''") and come to the conclusion that Freund & Blanchard are saying paraphilic infantilists are pedophiles. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 00:28, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::WLU, feel free to add your "masochistic gynaephiles" source to the "masochistic gynaephiles" article. This is the infantilism article. F&B had the option of using the then-established term of infantilism, but opted to use some other term instead, because they weren't writing about infantilism. ] (]) 05:03, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Bittergrey, what is the definition of a masochistic gynaephile? What is the definition of a paraphilic infantilist? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 11:48, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I'll pass on the invitation for ]. However, WLU, I am curious: Do you believe that infantilists are generally masochistic? ] (]) 13:56, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::What I personally believe is irrelevant, but the sources suggest there are probably infantilists who are interested in it for its masochistic aspects, and others who are in it for other reasons. There's very little research on the topic. | |||
:::::::::::I'm not asking you to actually engage in original research. I'm simply asking you to indicate you've read and understood the sources you are so critical of, by asking for something of substance from them. To whit, the definitions of masochistic gynaephiles and paraphilic infantilists. I'm not saying you should change the page to include the definitions, just that you summarize them. I think you're avoiding doing that because then it would be evidence that you are actually aware of the definitions being substantially identical and ] being justified. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 14:08, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::To quote a past WLU Clearly, if infantilists are generally not masochistic, equating infantilism with masochistic gynaephiles is wrong, in addition to being WP:OR. ] (]) 14:39, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::What is the definition of a masochistic gynaephile according to Freund & Blanchard, 1993? What is the definition of paraphilic infantilism? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:52, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::Repeating the same invitation for WP:OR, WLU? Shouldn't you be busy trying to undermine WLU's position, since it contradicts your current WP:OR? Or we could skip all this and just remove the claims that aren't supported by sources on infantilism.] (]) 16:09, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::Still dodging a question you know will undercut your position? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 16:13, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::Answered below. Answer below rejected. Question re-asked again, bringing the total to nine times. (Again, since I'm not the one seeking to include text in the article, I'm not the one who has to provide sources, per WP:Burden.) ] (]) 19:53, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
===Necessity of a second discussion=== | |||
I question the necessity of this second discussion. As we've seen, it appears doomed to merely rehash what was already said in ]. The core issue is still that F&Bs "Erotic target location errors in male gender dysphorics, paedophiles, and fetishists." doesn't mention infantilism (or any synonym used by any other reliable source). Infantilism was formally defined six years prior (1987 vs 1993), so the authors could have used the established term - but chose not to. '''Perhaps the most basic question is whether we feel the need to, as WLU requests, ignore all rules to use this source.''' (He called it a "minor modification.") We can discuss ] and ] at great length, but that doesn't mean that their results should be used in articles. F&B's first sentence claims that it is based on " clinical series of male paedophiles..." and we have no reason, short of WP:SYNTH or WP:OR, to question that. If we can't trust what an article says, we shouldn't be using it. | |||
However, paraphilic infantilism is '''not''' a crime, nor is it typically associated with crime. As such, I fail to see the relevance of criminology and the quoted opinion. It should be removed. ] (]) 03:37, 4 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
:Wrong, on the point of what F&B says asthat source uses the term "masochistic gynaephiles" as a synonym, since the definition matches that of infantilism (a person sexually motivated to act like an infant) and a subsequent publication featuring Blanchard as a coauthor makes the link explicit. | |||
:Wrong on the core issue since F&B could be replaced with CB&B; if the issue was truly yor objection to a ] you would have accepted the replacement source. If you agree to leave the text as is and replace F&B with CB&B, I will consider the issue resolved and we never have to have this conversation again. I have presented this option in the past and you have yet to indicate if you find it acceptable. | |||
:Wrong on the number of discussions, since this is at least the sixth time this very point about these very sources has been debated. Each time you clog the discussion with repetitive misrepresentations, selective quotations and in some cases outright lies (for instance, that the DSM defines infantilism) and each time I point out how you are wrong. The last section to address issues of substance closed with Ludwigs2's comment The ] is little more than ]. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 00:24, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::Since F&B was writing about a sample of pedophiles, they might have been describing a pedophile who also role-played. They chose not to use the term infantilism, and we aren't in a position to second-guess them. You can copy and paste your buddy's claims (it was source_s_ in that discussion, by the way) as many times as you like, and this won't change. As for compromises, WLU, I'm the one who started a discussion: You ignored and then reverted until you hit 3RR, and then started your own revival discussion. As for clogging discussions, you are the one who fought to cite 47 pages of the DSM, then 5 pages (4RR/28 hours), (and hijacking a 3O), then zero (0) pages,, and then finally one (1) page at the same article. You claimed to have read that source seven months into the conflict. In contrast, I have held to and supported one (and only one) position per discussion. WLU, you can't accuse me of "clogging" the talk pages. ] (]) 05:19, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::In addition to a sample of pedophiles, they also conducted case studies of masochistic gynaephiles. By focusing on solely the title of the article and the abstract, you are ignoring the parts of the article that discuss non-pedophiles, starting on page 561 with the statements "''Progress in understanding erotic target location errors will require careful distinction between genuine phenomena of erotic target location and superficially similar paraphilic acts and fantasies that may have different aetiologies...The above cases suggest a distinction between paedophiles with erotic imagery of themselves as children and masochistic gynaephiles with similar fantasies.''" So clearly the article is not just about pedophiles, and does not say masochistic gynaephiles are pedophiles. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 11:48, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::So you are claiming that the abstract is incorrect? The basic, inescapable fact is that F&B could have used the established term of infantilism or one of many less-established synonyms, and yet did not. They even used the term "cisvestism", but not infantilism. They chose to assert that they were writing about something else, and we need to accept that. ] (]) 13:54, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::No, you are putting words in my mouth. Abstracts are incomplete, abbreviated summaries of the whole paper which is why ]. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 14:01, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::The whole rest of the paper doesn't mention infantilism or any established synonym either. WLU, are there any other parts you'd like us to ignore because they contradict your position? ] (]) 14:13, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::What is the definition of a masochistic gynaephile, according to that article? Does Cantor, Blanchard & Barbaree use the term "masochistic gynaephile", or infantilist? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 14:32, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Since we are engaging in WP:SYNTH and WP:OR... | |||
::::::::* - James Cantor (The C of CB&B, a colleague of both F and B of F&B, and so most likely has met them). | |||
::::::::* - WLU | |||
::::::::So clearly neither WLU nor the authors consider infantilists generally masochistic (at least per AGF). Thus we should not equate infantilism with "masochistic gynaephilia". Of course, without RS's, we shouldn't be doing that anyway...] (]) 15:39, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Well thank the FSM that we're basing the article on sources, not on editor opinions! What do references , , and say about the subject? | |||
:::::::::What is the definition of a masochistic gynaephile according to Freund & Blanchard, 1993? What is the definition of paraphilic infantilism? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 15:50, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Linkspam aside, it is clear that not even WLU agrees with WLU's current attempt to equate infantilism and "masochistic gynaephilia," and that no RS's make this connection ] (]) 15:58, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Still dodging a question you know will undercut your position? Still misrepresenting CB&B's use of F&B? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 16:13, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::If you consider me an authority on this matter, feel free to add an EL to to the article. If you don't consider me an authority, why are you asking for my ruling? Since no RS's have been offered, and even your stated position (about infantilists not being masochistic) contradicts your stated position (about masochistic gynaephilia being equal to infantilism), there is nothing left to discuss. F&B doesn't mention infantilism according to F&B.] (]) 16:28, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::This is why I went into this discussion thinking it was pointless. You know I don't consider your website reliable, you know my arguments for including F&B, and rather than seriously engaging in a substantive fashion you are playing word games, including pointless quotes and diffs and strategically ignoring a simple request because you know it illustrates the abusrdity of your position. All of which I expected. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] | |||
::::::::::::::Someone needs to chill and thank the ] more often. As I wrote so long ago, WLU, you can avoid a pointless discussion by making points: You haven't. F&B don't mention infantilism or any established synonym of infantilism. No reliable source equates "masochistic gynaephilia" with infantilism. Quotes from you and James Cantor show that neither of you (previously) equated the two either. You had the ] here, and you haven't produced. F&B, at least according to F&B, doesn't discuss infantilism, and so should not be cited. ] (]) 16:43, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::What is the definition of a masochistic gynaephile according to Freund & Blanchard, 1993? What is the definition of paraphilic infantilism? ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 16:57, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::WLU has now repeated that question eight times. If I'm not an expert, my opinion doesn't mater. (I did quote WLU's past opinion because it contradicts his current assertion.) Since he is clearly not seeking my ruling as an expert, we can only conclude that he has nothing to offer. Usually he is more creative in his attempts at obscurity and discouragement through verbosity. ] (]) 17:20, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::And 8 times you have refused to provide the answers, despite the simplicity of the question. Do you not have a copy of Freund & Blanchard? I can e-mail it to you. It requires no expertise to simply read a source and select a definition, and I am indeed manifestly uninterested in your expertise. Merely your literacy and honesty. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 17:42, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::Since you clearly aren't interested in my opinion, I'll answer based on your opinion. Previously, you have asserted that infantilists are not generally masochistic: . This alone would rule out equating infantilism with "masochistic gynaephilia". Of course, that was in a discussion about excluding the DSM: " (Please note that unlike F&B, the DSM actually uses the term infantilism.) Additionally, WLU, if you accept that there are homosexual male infantilists, heterosexual female infantilists, or both, this would mean that infantilists weren't necessary ]. Do you? If so, this would mean that infantilists would be "generally non-masochistic, not-necessarily gynephilic." This is quite different than "masochistic gynaephilia." We could go into more detail, but if they don't match, they don't match. | |||
::::::::::::::::::To paraphrase WLU, to include "masochistic gynaephilia" material we would need a source that says all infantilists were "masochistic gynaephilies" and that all the "masochistic gynaephilies" texts apply to paraphilic infantilism. Of course, if there were an RS that used both terms, WLU wouldn't be wasting so much space asking the same question over and over. ] (]) 18:54, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::What is the definition of masochistic gynaephiles in Freund & Blanchard? Rather than quoting what I've said in the past, why don't you answer my current question? But none of this matters, since the RSN pretty much supported the current version of the page. So I guess I'm done, I'll consider the independent input from the RSN have addressed this issue and closed it. ] <small>] ] Misplaced Pages's rules:</small>]/] 19:19, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::Nine times.... Not surprising that the consensus of RSN seems to have been "you should take your personal fight over content elsewhere...you should move the argument to special subject portal (psychology, medicine)" with no discussion about relevance. WLU, if you are willing to let the unsupported and irrelevant material be removed, we can consider this matter closed. If not, the ] is yours. ] (]) 19:46, 4 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
===Trying Again...=== | |||
Given the last round of , the next step is to edit. Here is a step-by-step description of what I'm removing and why: | |||
:(This comment is a quote from a user page who keeps adding this back without first discussing it here.) | |||
1) Two citations to Freund & Blanchard, 1993: The term infantilism was formally adopted by the APA in the DSM IIIR, in 1987. F&B choose not to use that term, or any established synonym, in their paper. The first line of the abstract describes it as being based on a sample of pedophiles. Thus, according to F&B, F&B isn't about infantilism. Counterarguments degenerated into an invitation for ], equating "masochistic gynephiles" with infantilism based on editor opinion. This invitation was repeated nine times. These were answered with past quotes from the inviter showing that in other contexts, he held that infantilists were not generally masochistic:. That is, infantilists are not generally masochists, and so not generally "masochistic gynephilies." Please note that the inviter continues to reject the DSM's applicability to infantilism (eg. ), even though it actually uses the term infantilism and multiple independent sources refer to it as a source on infantilism. Neither of these are true of F&B. | |||
:Let me go ahead and quote for you chapter 4 of "Sex Crimes" on "Nuisance Sex Behaviors" (a completely made up weasel word, and the chapter which mentions fetishes and infantilism): | |||
:"There are many sexual behvaiors that are completely abhorrent to the senses of most Americans. These practices become more visible as scores of sex offenders are placed in correctional institutions throughout the United States. there is a growing amount of serious literature that suggests that many rapist, lust murderers, and sexually motivated serial murderers have histories of sexual behaviors that reflect patterns that in the past have been considered only nuisances. Nuisance sex behaviors are often viewed in a less serious fashion than sex crimes that cause serious trauma and death. But there may be great benefit in analyzing those who commit such nuisance sex acts; such analysis may indeed hold the key to understanding those who move into more serious sex offenses." (Sex Crimes, Page 63. Emphasis mine.) | |||
:This source is book on sex crimes written by criminologists. It is explicitly about crime, written by people whose expertise is on crime (and not on the psychological or biological origins of paraphilias). Furthermore, it broadly and explicitly links what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" to crime, a category under which "infantilism" is later defined. And what insight to they have into the origins of infantilism? Practically nothing of value; three sentences of unsourced suppositions, with no new data, no original or cited research, and nothing of value behind it: | |||
:"Why does one choose to practice infantilism? There is no simple answer to this question. At first blush, one would think it is totally sexual. But there does appear to be an element of street reduction for the practitioner of this form of sexual activity." (Sex Crimes, Page 81) | |||
:That's it. That doesn't even qualify as a "theory" on the origins of paraphilic infantilism. It's simply a short statement about the motivations of participants. Do you honestly believe that this little blurb carries any due weight when compared to actual theories on the psychological origins of paraphilias born out of psychological and psychiatric research? | |||
:This source is absolutely worthless at best, and at worst is explicitly associating non-normative sexual behaviors with some of the worst acts of violent crime without any evidence. I will be removing it again, and adding this comment into the talk page where others can see it, and if you add it again despite my well-reasoned objections without engaging in a discussion first, I will have no other choice but to take it to arbitration. ] (]) 21:53, 14 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:Copypaste from my talk page | |||
:” | |||
:Again, just because the authors of that book/source are criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal. <nowiki>https://books.google.com/books?id=_zqOsZSZxYQC&pg=PA81#v=onepage&q&f=false</nowiki> A blurb on the page says “This form of paraphilia should not be confused with any form of sexual child abuse, pedophilia, incest, or other forms of child molestation.” So I don’t see what you are saying, the authors themselves are making it very clear that that paraphilia in and of itself shouldn’t be confused with those heinous crimes, and they don’t consider it a crime. “Furthermore, it broadly and explicitly links what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" to crime, a category under which "infantilism" is later defined.” I do not see them as doing that due to them specifically making it clear on the page cited that the paraphilia should be separated from those crimes & not confused with them, and not mentioning infantilism anywhere else. | |||
:If you have a problem with the word criminologists being put in the article, I’ll say that what you consider broken clocks can be right twice a day, and again repeat that those criminologists, researchers in crime, explicitly say that the paraphilia shouldn’t be confused with crime, and even say practitioners of the activity are consenting adult partners, “Practitioners are called adult babies (Abs), diaper lovers (DIs), and consenting partners.” . Consider the fact that they are including the paraphilia in that book specifically to differentiate it between those actual harmful crimes and make that clear to the audience who may be confused, which I hope you can agree is an understandable reaction and confusion. | |||
:Yes, it is not a full fledged theory, but I don’t think that warrants taking it out of the article altogether, and may I also mention that all the other sources and cites aren’t completely in depth “actual theories on the psychological origins of paraphilias born out of psychological and psychiatric research,” partly due to the dearth of more complete research and sources. It’s a blurb but a blurb that proposes new possible causes/relations to this paraphilia, stress reduction and relation to transvestivism(“Why does one choose to practice infantilism? There is no simple answer to this question. At first blush, one would think it is totally sexual. But there does appear to be an element of stress reduction for the practitioner of this form of sexual activity. This is similar to an element that is present in the practice of transvestivism.”) And as said above in the article, “Research on the | |||
:] | |||
: of paraphilias in general is minimal and as of 2008 had essentially come to a standstill; it is not clear whether the development of infantilism shares a common cause with other paraphilias.“(40 can be accessed through | |||
:https://www.academia.edu/1909323/Handbook_of_sexual_and_gender_identity_disorders | |||
:) There is only one other bit within the article that mentions a possible cause being linked to ‘transvestism,’ and none to stress management/reduction, and this does not appear to be a well researched topic/area(I searched for sources and citations and much of what I found was already in the article.)” | |||
:] (]) 03:52, 15 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::I can see now that you're a good faith participant in editing this page, so thank you for joining the discussion here. I know it's not convenient to participate in these talk-pages because they are really slow moving, but it's worth doing to separate genuine attempts to improve the article from drive-by edits. To that point, I want you to understand that this page is not infrequently vandalized by bad-faith editors who seemingly want nothing more than to conflate paraphilic infantilism with (a) pedophilia, (b) sex crimes and (c) mental illness. A quick look at the revision history or even in this talk page will might shed some light on this. | |||
::At the very least, I hope the editors of this page can acknowledge the '''basic set of facts''' that (a) paraphilic infantilism is a consensual sexual interest/kink/fetish/roleplay between adults, which is in no way associated with pedophilia, (b) that there is no connection between paraphilic infantilism and any crime, and (c) that there is not necessarily a connection between paraphilic infantilism and mental illness or poor mental health. -- Should high-quality, verifiable sources challenge this set of facts, then that should be also reflected in the article, but from the research and sources that we have right now that doesn't appear to be the case. | |||
::One of the main pillars of Misplaced Pages editing is to present relevant facts and opinions with a ]. Among other things, this means avoiding value-laden language that (intentionally or otherwise) muddies the water around a topic. In the context of this article, to me that means sticking to the verifiable facts and avoiding the use of words that conflate paraphilic infantilism with crime or medical pathology. | |||
::I ''personally'' still don't feel that the source in question is high-quality, verifiable, or meets the bar for expertise in the subject of psychological/biological etiology of fetishes (especially when compared to the other theories that are already). But, like you pointed out, the research on this topic is sparse and because of that the bar for sources is still relatively low right now. I also don't think you've adequately defended the source's linking of "nuisance sex behaviors" to "more series sex offenses", which is not only self-contradictory to the excerpt that you shared, but is also inherently problematic, especially when considering how little real data/evidence that is used to back up that claim... | |||
::BUT, if ''you'' feel strongly that there is meaningful, valuable insight that this source brings to the table when it comes to stress relief or links to "transvestivism", then I don't have a problem with you adding that information to the appropriate sections and referencing this source. All that I ask is that you do so in a way that is neutral and avoids conflating paraphilic infantilism with crime. If that means removing the "Criminologists Stephen and Ronald Holmes" part of the sentence and working this information into the article in a more natural way, then I can live with that. | |||
::Sorry for writing a wall of text, but is that a reasonable compromise? ] (]) 21:18, 15 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::Again, I don’t see the problem with that excerpt. They explicitly state that the reader should not assume otherwise, contrary to whatever section of the book it’s in. Just because it’s in that section doesn’t mean the authors imply that’s always the case, especially if they ''clearly'' state otherwise. Just because they are Criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal or crime, sometimes they may be differentiating or making things clear, and if readers of the wiki article check the source they’ll know that. I don’t see a need for compromise, because I don’t see a major problem to begin with. ] (]) 09:35, 18 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::::Ok, this discussion is going in circles... | |||
::::To be very clear, ''my problems'' with the source is that they are (a; undue weight) not experts in the fields of psychology, psychiatry, sexology, biology, or any other field that can shed light on the origins or etiology of paraphilias, (b; 'criminalization', for lack of a better term) very explicitly, and yet without any real evidence, associating what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" with sex crimes, despite the fact that's it's counter to the facts, and (c; low-quality source) the extent of the content in that source is little more than two vague sentences and no real data or insight. | |||
::::Readers should not have to research every source themselves (and they won't, by the way) to understand and interpret what is being said. It is the "job" of the editor to find high quality, verifiable sources and to present that information to the reader in an accurate, clear, informative and unbiased way. Even if you really believe that the source in question doesn't conflate atypical sexual interests with sex crimes (which it very clearly does, again, see the quote above), that only makes it ''more'' important for the editors of this page to also not do so. | |||
::::The "need for compromise" comes from the fact that you are seemingly adamant about including a line about crimonology in this wikipedia article, despite the fact that it's neither relevant to the article, nor is it even linking to a high quality source. Unfortunately, saying the same things over and over again is not going to get us anywhere. I'm against it, and I have laid out very clearly why. If you can't address my problems with the source, and if we can't find a compromise that you and I are both happy with, then we will have no choice but to find outside arbitration. | |||
::::In light of the wikipedia editing guideline, the burden of justifying why this source and the word "criminologists" should be included in this article are on you. And even though the bar is pretty low right now, I feel confident that the arguments against including them are stronger. ] (]) 16:08, 19 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::If I can provide a ] here, albeit an unsolicited one, I think that Fuwa has the better end of the policy stick here: for someone whose name and edit history suggests that they could be considered an SPA on this and related subjects, they seem to have a good grasp on the relevant policy considerations. Having looked at the specifics of the wording ( for those who might come upon this discussion next--thank you justanotherguy54, for not edit warring over this after the second revert, btw) I have to agree that the wording was non-neutral and problematically suggestive. Jag54, with regard to a sentence that starts with {{tq|"] Stephen and Ronald Holmes believe that while there is no simple answer to the origins of infantilism..."}}, I feel that {{tq|"Just because they are Criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal or crime, sometimes they may be differentiating or making things clear, and if readers of the wiki article check the source they’ll know that. I don’t see a need for compromise, because I don’t see a major problem to begin with."}}, considerably underappreciates the concerns here. Yes, criminologists may at times make observations outside the narrow constraints of criminality or criminal justice, but in the context of an encyclopedia article, the reader is most definitely primed to contextualize any quote that begins by stating the quoted parties field of inquiry as pertaining to said specialty. I think it very much muddies the waters. | |||
:::::As to the argument that the nuances will become immediately apparent to anyone who follows up on the source, well, the simple reality is that while, as encyclopedists, we would always advise a reader to check into the sources, the vast majority simply do not, which is one of several important reasons that we construct our content to be as facially neutral as possible in the first impression. Further, I think Fuwas proposed compromise is a more than fair middle ground: there's a decent ]/] argument to be made here for excluding this quasi-armchair psychology altogether, so if Fuwa is proposing to maintain it, but suggests merely that the most potentially misleading and problematic part me excised, I think that's reasonable. Mind you, this is a bit of an atypical case: often one of the first things you want to consider doing when the neutrality of a statement is in question is ask whether better attribution will fix the issue. But every rule has it's exceptions, and I think this is a good example of that principle. | |||
2) Two citations to Cantor, Blanchard, and Barbaree, 2009: These are used in ] to apply specific comments in F&B regarding "masochistic gynephiles" to infantilists, even though CB&B never use the term "masochistic gynephiles." This synth is contradicted by an on-wiki comment by James Cantor: | |||
:::::I do think it's only fair that I note that I am here by way of looking at old contributions of FlyerReborn, since deceased, who voiced an opinion on related issues above. So it may be that I am operating from a bias here, but I don't think so: I think I would have viewed the issues here in the same way even had I not seen her feedback. Indeed, Flyer actually seems to have argued in the other direction to some extent, insofar as she was in favour of maintaining certain other references to deviance (albeit by virtue of pointing out the lack of connection between this paraphilia and certain psychological pathologies/criminal offenses). But those were different cases and the functions of those references are very valuable for clarifying matters for the reader, whereas I think the disputed language in this instance actually implies a link and thereby confuses the issue. '']]'' 10:13, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
3) The paragraph previously supported only by #1 and #2. | |||
::::::{{u|Justanotherguy54}}, I'm very sorry, but I had to rollback your last two edits: they just made a complete mess of the talk page formatting and discussion, and made your new comments and the post you were trying to embed unreadable. I couldn't even figure out what was meant to go where and at what level of ] because it was such a mess. Could you please reintroduce your thoughts through the normal UI when you have an opportunity? Also, please don't copy and paste another user's entire post again, including signature, as that only confuses matters further. Consider instead using the <nowiki>{{tq|quoted text}}</nowiki> template to quote the portions you want to respond to. Apologies: I don't like to refactor, let alone delete, another user's TP contributions, but it really was going to destroy any readability of the page. '']]'' 05:45, 2 July 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I'm really not sure why @] is so hell-bent on adding this passage even though the consensus seems to be that the source is weak and that criminologists are being given undue weight in the context of the psychiatric, psychological and sexological origins of paraphilia... | |||
:::::::I wonder if this isn't something we need further mediation to handle, because it seems like we've now lost the thread of communication on this issue, leaving only an edit war. ] (]) 09:20, 17 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Is "TB/DL" appropriate for inclusion? If so, how should it be included? == | |||
4) One citation to Dickey, 2007: As a letter to the editor, this was never peer-reviewed. | |||
In a recent edit I removed a clumsily tacked on bit describing "TB/DL", which is "AB/DL" expression ''when practiced by people below the age of consent''. | |||
5) The phrase previously supported only by #1, #2, and #4. | |||
The main reason for my reversion of this change was grammatical and to preserve readability, but as these terms a may refer to a potentially sexual activity of minors it's also worth being careful and precise with how this kind of content is handled (both for the safety of minors, and to prevent any unnecessary confusion or conflation of ''adult'' paraphilic infantilism with minors). | |||
6) One citation to Cantor, Blanchard, and Barbaree, 2009: In the paragraph on ETLE, the source reads " interpreted infantilism as an erotic target location error for persons whose erotic target is children, that is, infantilism as an autoerotic form of pedophilia." Paul B at RSN commented "It's blindingly obvious that Blanchard believes that infantalism is an 'Autoerotic form of pedophilia'. WLU says that 'Autoerotic form of pedophilia' is not the same thing as 'pedophilia'. Well, yes it is. That's what 'a form of pedophilia' means. I think this theory is utterly idiotic...". This is also an exceptional claim, since no other RS claims that infantilism is pedophilia. | |||
As this page is mainly focused on adult expression so far, personally I'm not sure that "TB/DL" is appropriate for inclusion and may instead warrant ''its own page'', so as to not muddy the waters or over-complicate things. | |||
The paragraph removed in #3 is a good illustration of how problematic the sources are: F&B was previously used in Misplaced Pages to support text stating that infantilists _are not_ pedophiles. CB&B mention F&B as claiming that infantilists _are_ pedophiles. Per AGF, we can't assume that this is an intentional act of misrepresentation, but evidence that F&B is obscure, and indirectly that CB&B's comment on F&B isn't that certain. This might be why Dickey doesn't cite F&B, even though they all work for the same facility, CAMH. (In spite of this, there is no overlap in the terminology of Dickey, CB&B, and F&B.) | |||
However if you feel that "TB/DL" is appropriate for inclusion in this page, please make your case here and describe how it should be done in accordance with the goals and standards of Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 18:10, 25 May 2024 (UTC) | |||
Even in Cantor's on-wiki comment, he wrote that ...not pedophilia. It is possible that the ] that infantilists are pedophiles is only held by Blanchard, and then only recently. Fringe theories should be included in articles (other than those about the fringe theory itself) ] Additionally, ]. This single, questionable source doesn't fit the bill. | |||
:What would be put on a supposed “TB/DL" page if that term refers to minors under the age of consent? Not appropriate for inclusion anywhere. ] (]) 13:50, 4 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
7) The section previously supported only by #6. On Dec 6th, this section was weasel-worded to avoid removal due to the exceptional claim. However, the exceptional claim is in the only source, so removing it from the text would be a misrepresentation. Whether the text includes or does not include the exceptional claim, the end result is the same: The text should be removed. ] (]) 02:17, 6 April 2012 (UTC) |
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Regarding pedophilia to child sexual abuse.
Pedophilia should not be directly related to child sexual abuse as pedophilia is the sexual attraction to children, not the act of causing harm to them. The overall feel of this section is that a pedophile cannot behave towards a child in a protective manner and this is an ill-perceived ideal based on stereotype.
It's the same as saying everyone who thinks about suicide kills themselves.
115.198.94.160 (talk) 16:59, 14 February 2014 (UTC)
I don't think pedophilia has any relevance or should be mentioned in this article at all. Saying something is "not" something doesn't really belong. Paraphilic infantilism is not driving a monster truck, either. But we don't need to say it in the article. Sure, there may be some idiots out there who commonly confuse paraphilic infantilism with driving monster trucks, but I do not see that we cater on wikipedia in an article to saying everything under a sun something is not. You do not define something by listing out everything it is *not*, but rather, what it is. Move to delete reference to pedophilia as having nothing to do with the article. 71.226.11.248 (talk) 07:18, 22 May 2014 (UTC)
- Since paraphilic infantilism is commonly confused with pedophilia, so commonly confused with it, apparently, that WP:Reliable sources address the matter, it is WP:Due weight (very appropriate) that the article addresses this misconception. Flyer22 (talk) 07:29, 22 May 2014 (UTC)
- I have changed "infantilism is not related to pedophilia, or any other form of child sexual abuse" to "infantilism is not related to pedophilia, or any form of child sexual abuse", because the word "other" implied that pedophilia is a form of child abuse which it is not. 31.52.253.135 (talk) 13:34, 14 May 2016 (UTC)
- "Commonly confused" by who, exactly?
- First, this appears to be a straight-forward example of weasel words and unsupported attribution, as it is effectively the same as vaguely declaring that "some are said to believe", "many people say", "x has been described as y", etc. But, who exactly are these people who confuse paraphilic infantilism with pedophilia, how common is "common", and most importantly, why is their confusion and misconceptions credible or noteworthy?
- I'm also reminded of the phase "teach the controversy"; from a movement in which unscientific opinions were suggested to be given comparable weight and credibility as scientific fact. And yet, if we look at the Misplaced Pages article on evolution, it should be noted that there is no mention of the pseudo-scientific theory of intelligent design outside of the very last paragraph of the last section, concerning "Social and Cultural Responses".
- In my view that approach is appropriate, because it is not the role of an encyclopedia to imbue all ideas with equal weight, but instead to primarily present objective facts and credible viewpoints from verifiable sources.
- Finally, on top of the fact that there is no credible or verifiable association between paraphilic infantilism and pedophilia, the label of "pedophile" itself is an extremely value-laden label. These kinds of labels, especially when misapplied, can do real damage to the health and safety of people as well as the ability for society at large to understand and discuss the true diversity or human experience.
- It's for these reasons that I also strongly argue to remove the vague and dubious references to pedophilia from this article as being totally irrelevant and given undue weight compared to objective facts and credible, modern and verifiable viewpoints.
- (If anything, "teaching the controversy" in which paraphilic infantilism is confused with pedophilia should be relegated to a specific section of the article. But only if there is a legitimate and reasonable basis to give weight to such an obvious misconception. In my view it's long past due that those who want to include references to pedophilia in this article justify doing so with something more credible than weasel words, lest this very article becomes a vector for propagating this harmful and factually baseless misconception.) FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 08:41, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
- commented added on behalf of FuwaFuwaDL 0xDeadbeef→∞ (talk to me) 12:52, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
It is not important but I feel that you do not understand English correctly. "infantilism is not related to paedophilia, or any other form of sexual abuse of children" implies that paedophilia is a form of child abuse, which is not contrary to the usual understanding of the matter, so the sentence could remain in this form. To imply that infantilism is a form of child abuse you would have to write "paedophilia is not related to infantilism, or any other form of sexual abuse of children". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.37.54.83 (talk) 23:37, 10 July 2016 (UTC)
- I've added a reference to a new (2019) study indicating that there is no correlation between infantilism and pedophilic interests. I've also removed the language "infantilism is commonly confused with pedophilia" from the introduction (where no source was cited) and revised it in the main text (where the source cited was from 1991). If the article were to assert that this confusion is common, I'd think it would have to cite a more recent source to show that the confusion remains commmon. Otherwise there is a problem with Misplaced Pages:Avoid weasel words. The current policy on WP:Reliable sources doesn't appear to address this issue. HighStdDev (talk) 16:53, 9 October 2019 (UTC)
- Reverted. Per WP:MEDRS, we should not be basing content on some new primary source study. And we include historical views, such as John Money's. Whether such views should be regulated to the "History" section is something to consider. Either way, without your addition, the article is already clear that paraphilic infantilism is not the same thing as pedophilia. As for citing that the confusion is common, which it clearly is and is why you felt the need to add the study you added, I will see about sourcing that with a newer WP:MEDRS-compliant source later on. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 03:55, 10 October 2019 (UTC)
- I've added a reference to a new (2019) study indicating that there is no correlation between infantilism and pedophilic interests. I've also removed the language "infantilism is commonly confused with pedophilia" from the introduction (where no source was cited) and revised it in the main text (where the source cited was from 1991). If the article were to assert that this confusion is common, I'd think it would have to cite a more recent source to show that the confusion remains commmon. Otherwise there is a problem with Misplaced Pages:Avoid weasel words. The current policy on WP:Reliable sources doesn't appear to address this issue. HighStdDev (talk) 16:53, 9 October 2019 (UTC)
- (1) There are a lot of primary sources in the reference list of the article currently, the WP:MEDRS policy on primary sources not withstanding. If this article can cite a case study, I don't see why it can't cite a survey study with over a thousand subjects. Is there a suitably neutral way of including the finding in Fuss et al. somewhere in this article? Perhaps a direct quotation?
- (2) I really think the paragraph on Money's views in the "pedophilia" section has to be removed or modified. As written, it is making a speculative allegation about diaper fetishists, using the word "may," that would be Defamation per se if said about a named individual. Can the claim about diaper fetishists be removed from this paragraph, leaving behind the unproblematic comment about Money's view of infantilism?
- (3) Consider "sometimes confused" rather than "commonly confused" if a neutral, recent source can't be found. HighStdDev (talk) 06:14, 10 October 2019 (UTC)
- Yes, there are a lot of primary sources in the article. And when someone has argued that regarding other articles, my response has been that existing poor sources and/or content does not mean that it is okay to add more poor sources and/or poor content. Furthermore, primary-sourced content based on older sources is much more likely to be covered in secondary and/or tertiary academic sources than a primary source from the current year is. I haven't edited this article much, but if I ever get around to doing so, it would include replacing the primary sources with secondary and tertiary sources where possible without losing important content. I might need to do that even if I'd rather not take the time to do it; this is so that the article adheres to WP:MEDRS as best it can (which may sometimes mean retaining a primary source here and there, per WP:MEDDATE), to help keep out poor or WP:Fringe content. If there is any content in the article that falls under WP:Fringe, we should consider how best to present that material or to remove it. But when it comes to early/historical sexological views, even if they are fringe, we should include those in some way. For example, Money's Lovemap theory is something we should cover. I changed the aforementioned Money text from "states" to "argued." I think that with the WP:In-text attribution and the use of "argued" and "may," it's clear that this is Money's opinion. It's not presented as fact. It seems to fit in that section because the sentence briefly addresses sexual attraction to diaper-wearing babies, and it doesn't seem he was referring to people with that attraction being sexually oriented toward adults in any way. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 01:30, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
- I take your point about adding further primary sources. The paragraph on Money needed further editing. As written, the passage suggested that Money thought that (some? all?) diaper fetishists "may be" nepiophiles. That is a shocking accusation, bordering on libel, if he indeed took that view. I was not able to find the Money book cited in this passage, but I was able to find Money's definition of "autonepiophilia" in Lovemaps (p. 259). There, he defines the terms "autonepiophilia" and "nepiophilia" without saying anything about diaper fetishists. I've edited the passage on Money so that it makes no mention of diaper fetishists. I trust this is OK, since diaper fetishism is not the topic of this article. HighStdDev (talk) 02:06, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
- With this edit, you removed the "Money argued" piece. If he did argue that diaper fetishists may be sexually attracted to diaper-wearing babies, that is his argument and would still be his argument even if in the Diaper fetishism article. Whether or not to include the material is not a matter of libel. Unless speaking of libel in terms of some WP:BLP matter, libel has nothing to do with how we write Misplaced Pages articles; see, for example, WP:No legal threats. Diaper fetishism is a related topic, which is why it's mentioned in the lead and there is a section on it in this article. The Money bit you removed can go there, where Money is already mentioned. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 03:13, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
- I take your point about adding further primary sources. The paragraph on Money needed further editing. As written, the passage suggested that Money thought that (some? all?) diaper fetishists "may be" nepiophiles. That is a shocking accusation, bordering on libel, if he indeed took that view. I was not able to find the Money book cited in this passage, but I was able to find Money's definition of "autonepiophilia" in Lovemaps (p. 259). There, he defines the terms "autonepiophilia" and "nepiophilia" without saying anything about diaper fetishists. I've edited the passage on Money so that it makes no mention of diaper fetishists. I trust this is OK, since diaper fetishism is not the topic of this article. HighStdDev (talk) 02:06, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
- But, yes, without being sure if he made the argument and since the piece is not vital, we can leave it out. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 03:21, 11 October 2019 (UTC)
Infantilist found guilty of kidnap, rape and torture of child
In light of the David Challenor case should the sentence
"Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and infantilists do not seek children as sexual partners."
not be amended to read
"Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and infantilists do not normally seek children as sexual partners."
I'm hesitant to edit the article as I don't know if someone is actively managing it and whether this would require some additional information on how different paraphilias can be present in the same person, but I think this should be amended (especially since this is not the only conviction of an infantilist in relation to children).Small candles (talk) 14:43, 2 September 2018 (UTC)
- Content should be based on what the literature states, not on some news headline. That stated, child molesters come from a variety of backgrounds. It is obviously incorrect to imply that an infantilist can never be sexually interested in little children. Those familiar with the literature on pedophilia and child sexual abuse topics know that it's not even the case that everyone is who has sexually abused a little kid is technically a pedophile; the Pedophilia article addresses this. So feel free to add "normally." I'm not going to revert. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 06:06, 3 September 2018 (UTC)
- All this conversation does is prove just how completely out-of-place, and potentially loaded, the above sentence is.
- Any category of person, or member of any group, has the possibility of being a pedophile (or a rapist, murderer, or on the positive side, an olympic athlete, renowned artist, astronaut, etc.), but that obviously does not warrant the weight of inclusion without solid evidence of a genuine connection, correlation or causation.
- For example, there have been countless documented examples of priests having sexually abused children, but if you check the article on priests you won't any reference to pedophilia, or other such value-laden language to that effect. You certainly don't see a sentence that says, "Though commonly confused with pedophilia, the two conditions are distinct and priests do not normally seek children as sexual partners.". And rightly so, because even with an abundance of examples of priests having sexually abused children, it is still not considered by any rational person to be a defining feature of priesthood in general.
- So, again, clearing up the possibility of "confusion" is not something that should be a persistent through-line of this article (which should really be focused on accurately describing what paraphilic infantilism is, and not what it is not). If anything, explaining the differences between paraphilic infantilism and pedophilia should be relegated to its own (unbiased, well-sourced and verifiable) section or article entirely. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 18:58, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
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Petition to remove, replace or localize value-laden, inaccurate, biased or otherwise dated terminology.
I would like us to examine and discuss the use of various terms used in this article, and whether they are appropriate in the context of our modern understanding of paraphilic infantilism as well as paraphilias and atypical sexual interests in general. For example:
1 - The word "syndrome" as used in "Adult Baby Syndrome". According to the American Psychological Association's Dictionary of Psychology a "syndrome" is defined as "n. a set of symptoms and signs that are usually due to a single cause (or set of related causes) and together indicate a particular physical or mental disease or disorder.". However, as of the DSM-5, the psychological consensus draws a clear and intention distinction between paraphilias (as a benign, but atypical sexual desire) and paraphilic disorders (as stress, impairment, or personal harm to the self or others as the result of paraphilias). Connecting those two dots makes it very clear that paraphilias like paraphilic infantilism are not in and of themselves to be considered a mental disease or psychological disorder--rendering the term "Adult Baby Syndrome" archaic, obsolete and potentially misleading in the context of the lead section.
2 - Similarly, the word "condition" as used in the section header "Relation to other conditions", may also evoke the concept of paraphilia being a "medical condition. Though admittedly this point is debatable, as "condition" is a fairly broad term on its own.
3 - As eluded to in the article itself, the term "psychosexual infantilism" is extremely archaic, has changed over time, and is fundamentally less descriptive than the term "paraphilic infantilism". Not only is "physchosexual infantilism" a virtually unused term in modern research or ABDL subculture context, neither Freud's (1856–1939) nor Stekel's (1868-1940) use of the term is consistent with the modern classification or understanding or infantilism, paraphilias, or the diversity of human sexual expression in general. Thus, I'm arguing that the term "psychosexual infantilism" is only relevant in a historical context, and likely doesn't belong as one of the a.k.a.'s in the lead section.
There may be other ways in which terminology can be clarified or improved, but I want to stress my general belief that it's both important and socially responsible that the terms used by Misplaced Pages to discuss sensitive topics adequately reflect the modern day understanding and consensus, otherwise we run the risk of further perpetuating historical systemic biases. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 00:30, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
- 4 - The use of "gone wrong" or "errors" here are both further examples of value-laden and biased terminology. (From: "A variety of causes have been proposed, including altered lovemaps, imprinting gone wrong and errors in erotic targets, though there is no consensus.) These ought to be replaced with neutral language. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 00:49, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
- 5 - The sentence "Additionally, infantilists may not consider themselves as suffering from a medical condition and may not want to change their behavior, a common occurrence among individuals with paraphilias" seems to imply that infantilism is a medical condition or is a behavior that needs to be corrected or avoided. Not only is this not consistent with recent psychological consensus on paraphilias according to the DSM-5, this statement feels generally biased. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 09:34, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
- Quick note: I have implemented some of these changes.
- To me, it's very important that we do not introduce bias into this article by pathologizing benign sexual fetishes (as is consistent with the declassification of fetishes in the DSM-5), associating legitimate sexual expression with crime, or giving undue weight to "confusion" by disingenuously or erroneously conflating paraphilic infantilism with totally unrelated, and in some cases deeply stigmatized or taboo, sexual behaviors.
- In fact, we should take it a step further and depathologize, decriminalize and destigmatize the language in this article in favor of truly fair, accurate and neutral descriptions.
- As editors, we are not here to keep the article static and stagnant. We are here to leave it in better condition than we found it. And so, we really ought to come together to try and improve the accuracy, neutrality, verifiability and overall quality of this article, so that we can help the people in the future develop a better understanding of this paraphilia and fetishes like it.
- And not only because "knowledge is power" and the truth is important, but also because there is a human side to sexuality, fetishism, and the long history of shame and stigmatization that has lead to many past injustices. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 03:42, 9 May 2023 (UTC)
- 5 - The sentence "Additionally, infantilists may not consider themselves as suffering from a medical condition and may not want to change their behavior, a common occurrence among individuals with paraphilias" seems to imply that infantilism is a medical condition or is a behavior that needs to be corrected or avoided. Not only is this not consistent with recent psychological consensus on paraphilias according to the DSM-5, this statement feels generally biased. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 09:34, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
Criminology is not relevant to the topic.
Among other issues, this article contains a line that reads, "Criminologists Stephen and Ronald Holmes believe that while there is no simple answer to the origins of infantilism, the practices may involve an element of stress reduction similar to that of transvestism."
However, paraphilic infantilism is not a crime, nor is it typically associated with crime. As such, I fail to see the relevance of criminology and the quoted opinion. It should be removed. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 03:37, 4 May 2023 (UTC)
- (This comment is a quote from a user page who keeps adding this back without first discussing it here.)
- Let me go ahead and quote for you chapter 4 of "Sex Crimes" on "Nuisance Sex Behaviors" (a completely made up weasel word, and the chapter which mentions fetishes and infantilism):
- "There are many sexual behvaiors that are completely abhorrent to the senses of most Americans. These practices become more visible as scores of sex offenders are placed in correctional institutions throughout the United States. there is a growing amount of serious literature that suggests that many rapist, lust murderers, and sexually motivated serial murderers have histories of sexual behaviors that reflect patterns that in the past have been considered only nuisances. Nuisance sex behaviors are often viewed in a less serious fashion than sex crimes that cause serious trauma and death. But there may be great benefit in analyzing those who commit such nuisance sex acts; such analysis may indeed hold the key to understanding those who move into more serious sex offenses." (Sex Crimes, Page 63. Emphasis mine.)
- This source is book on sex crimes written by criminologists. It is explicitly about crime, written by people whose expertise is on crime (and not on the psychological or biological origins of paraphilias). Furthermore, it broadly and explicitly links what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" to crime, a category under which "infantilism" is later defined. And what insight to they have into the origins of infantilism? Practically nothing of value; three sentences of unsourced suppositions, with no new data, no original or cited research, and nothing of value behind it:
- "Why does one choose to practice infantilism? There is no simple answer to this question. At first blush, one would think it is totally sexual. But there does appear to be an element of street reduction for the practitioner of this form of sexual activity." (Sex Crimes, Page 81)
- That's it. That doesn't even qualify as a "theory" on the origins of paraphilic infantilism. It's simply a short statement about the motivations of participants. Do you honestly believe that this little blurb carries any due weight when compared to actual theories on the psychological origins of paraphilias born out of psychological and psychiatric research?
- This source is absolutely worthless at best, and at worst is explicitly associating non-normative sexual behaviors with some of the worst acts of violent crime without any evidence. I will be removing it again, and adding this comment into the talk page where others can see it, and if you add it again despite my well-reasoned objections without engaging in a discussion first, I will have no other choice but to take it to arbitration. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 21:53, 14 June 2023 (UTC)
- Copypaste from my talk page
- ”
- Again, just because the authors of that book/source are criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal. https://books.google.com/books?id=_zqOsZSZxYQC&pg=PA81#v=onepage&q&f=false A blurb on the page says “This form of paraphilia should not be confused with any form of sexual child abuse, pedophilia, incest, or other forms of child molestation.” So I don’t see what you are saying, the authors themselves are making it very clear that that paraphilia in and of itself shouldn’t be confused with those heinous crimes, and they don’t consider it a crime. “Furthermore, it broadly and explicitly links what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" to crime, a category under which "infantilism" is later defined.” I do not see them as doing that due to them specifically making it clear on the page cited that the paraphilia should be separated from those crimes & not confused with them, and not mentioning infantilism anywhere else.
- If you have a problem with the word criminologists being put in the article, I’ll say that what you consider broken clocks can be right twice a day, and again repeat that those criminologists, researchers in crime, explicitly say that the paraphilia shouldn’t be confused with crime, and even say practitioners of the activity are consenting adult partners, “Practitioners are called adult babies (Abs), diaper lovers (DIs), and consenting partners.” . Consider the fact that they are including the paraphilia in that book specifically to differentiate it between those actual harmful crimes and make that clear to the audience who may be confused, which I hope you can agree is an understandable reaction and confusion.
- Yes, it is not a full fledged theory, but I don’t think that warrants taking it out of the article altogether, and may I also mention that all the other sources and cites aren’t completely in depth “actual theories on the psychological origins of paraphilias born out of psychological and psychiatric research,” partly due to the dearth of more complete research and sources. It’s a blurb but a blurb that proposes new possible causes/relations to this paraphilia, stress reduction and relation to transvestivism(“Why does one choose to practice infantilism? There is no simple answer to this question. At first blush, one would think it is totally sexual. But there does appear to be an element of stress reduction for the practitioner of this form of sexual activity. This is similar to an element that is present in the practice of transvestivism.”) And as said above in the article, “Research on the
- etiology
- of paraphilias in general is minimal and as of 2008 had essentially come to a standstill; it is not clear whether the development of infantilism shares a common cause with other paraphilias.“(40 can be accessed through
- https://www.academia.edu/1909323/Handbook_of_sexual_and_gender_identity_disorders
- ) There is only one other bit within the article that mentions a possible cause being linked to ‘transvestism,’ and none to stress management/reduction, and this does not appear to be a well researched topic/area(I searched for sources and citations and much of what I found was already in the article.)”
- Justanotherguy54 (talk) 03:52, 15 June 2023 (UTC)
- I can see now that you're a good faith participant in editing this page, so thank you for joining the discussion here. I know it's not convenient to participate in these talk-pages because they are really slow moving, but it's worth doing to separate genuine attempts to improve the article from drive-by edits. To that point, I want you to understand that this page is not infrequently vandalized by bad-faith editors who seemingly want nothing more than to conflate paraphilic infantilism with (a) pedophilia, (b) sex crimes and (c) mental illness. A quick look at the revision history or even in this talk page will might shed some light on this.
- At the very least, I hope the editors of this page can acknowledge the basic set of facts that (a) paraphilic infantilism is a consensual sexual interest/kink/fetish/roleplay between adults, which is in no way associated with pedophilia, (b) that there is no connection between paraphilic infantilism and any crime, and (c) that there is not necessarily a connection between paraphilic infantilism and mental illness or poor mental health. -- Should high-quality, verifiable sources challenge this set of facts, then that should be also reflected in the article, but from the research and sources that we have right now that doesn't appear to be the case.
- One of the main pillars of Misplaced Pages editing is to present relevant facts and opinions with a neutral point of view. Among other things, this means avoiding value-laden language that (intentionally or otherwise) muddies the water around a topic. In the context of this article, to me that means sticking to the verifiable facts and avoiding the use of words that conflate paraphilic infantilism with crime or medical pathology.
- I personally still don't feel that the source in question is high-quality, verifiable, or meets the bar for expertise in the subject of psychological/biological etiology of fetishes (especially when compared to the other theories that are already). But, like you pointed out, the research on this topic is sparse and because of that the bar for sources is still relatively low right now. I also don't think you've adequately defended the source's linking of "nuisance sex behaviors" to "more series sex offenses", which is not only self-contradictory to the excerpt that you shared, but is also inherently problematic, especially when considering how little real data/evidence that is used to back up that claim...
- BUT, if you feel strongly that there is meaningful, valuable insight that this source brings to the table when it comes to stress relief or links to "transvestivism", then I don't have a problem with you adding that information to the appropriate sections and referencing this source. All that I ask is that you do so in a way that is neutral and avoids conflating paraphilic infantilism with crime. If that means removing the "Criminologists Stephen and Ronald Holmes" part of the sentence and working this information into the article in a more natural way, then I can live with that.
- Sorry for writing a wall of text, but is that a reasonable compromise? FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 21:18, 15 June 2023 (UTC)
- Again, I don’t see the problem with that excerpt. They explicitly state that the reader should not assume otherwise, contrary to whatever section of the book it’s in. Just because it’s in that section doesn’t mean the authors imply that’s always the case, especially if they clearly state otherwise. Just because they are Criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal or crime, sometimes they may be differentiating or making things clear, and if readers of the wiki article check the source they’ll know that. I don’t see a need for compromise, because I don’t see a major problem to begin with. Justanotherguy54 (talk) 09:35, 18 June 2023 (UTC)
- Ok, this discussion is going in circles...
- To be very clear, my problems with the source is that they are (a; undue weight) not experts in the fields of psychology, psychiatry, sexology, biology, or any other field that can shed light on the origins or etiology of paraphilias, (b; 'criminalization', for lack of a better term) very explicitly, and yet without any real evidence, associating what they call "nuisance sex behaviors" with sex crimes, despite the fact that's it's counter to the facts, and (c; low-quality source) the extent of the content in that source is little more than two vague sentences and no real data or insight.
- Readers should not have to research every source themselves (and they won't, by the way) to understand and interpret what is being said. It is the "job" of the editor to find high quality, verifiable sources and to present that information to the reader in an accurate, clear, informative and unbiased way. Even if you really believe that the source in question doesn't conflate atypical sexual interests with sex crimes (which it very clearly does, again, see the quote above), that only makes it more important for the editors of this page to also not do so.
- The "need for compromise" comes from the fact that you are seemingly adamant about including a line about crimonology in this wikipedia article, despite the fact that it's neither relevant to the article, nor is it even linking to a high quality source. Unfortunately, saying the same things over and over again is not going to get us anywhere. I'm against it, and I have laid out very clearly why. If you can't address my problems with the source, and if we can't find a compromise that you and I are both happy with, then we will have no choice but to find outside arbitration.
- In light of the wikipedia editing guideline, the burden of justifying why this source and the word "criminologists" should be included in this article are on you. And even though the bar is pretty low right now, I feel confident that the arguments against including them are stronger. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 16:08, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
- If I can provide a third opinion here, albeit an unsolicited one, I think that Fuwa has the better end of the policy stick here: for someone whose name and edit history suggests that they could be considered an SPA on this and related subjects, they seem to have a good grasp on the relevant policy considerations. Having looked at the specifics of the wording (diffed here for those who might come upon this discussion next--thank you justanotherguy54, for not edit warring over this after the second revert, btw) I have to agree that the wording was non-neutral and problematically suggestive. Jag54, with regard to a sentence that starts with
"Criminologists Stephen and Ronald Holmes believe that while there is no simple answer to the origins of infantilism..."
, I feel that"Just because they are Criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal or crime, sometimes they may be differentiating or making things clear, and if readers of the wiki article check the source they’ll know that. I don’t see a need for compromise, because I don’t see a major problem to begin with."
, considerably underappreciates the concerns here. Yes, criminologists may at times make observations outside the narrow constraints of criminality or criminal justice, but in the context of an encyclopedia article, the reader is most definitely primed to contextualize any quote that begins by stating the quoted parties field of inquiry as pertaining to said specialty. I think it very much muddies the waters.
- If I can provide a third opinion here, albeit an unsolicited one, I think that Fuwa has the better end of the policy stick here: for someone whose name and edit history suggests that they could be considered an SPA on this and related subjects, they seem to have a good grasp on the relevant policy considerations. Having looked at the specifics of the wording (diffed here for those who might come upon this discussion next--thank you justanotherguy54, for not edit warring over this after the second revert, btw) I have to agree that the wording was non-neutral and problematically suggestive. Jag54, with regard to a sentence that starts with
- Again, I don’t see the problem with that excerpt. They explicitly state that the reader should not assume otherwise, contrary to whatever section of the book it’s in. Just because it’s in that section doesn’t mean the authors imply that’s always the case, especially if they clearly state otherwise. Just because they are Criminologists does not mean everything they write about is criminal or crime, sometimes they may be differentiating or making things clear, and if readers of the wiki article check the source they’ll know that. I don’t see a need for compromise, because I don’t see a major problem to begin with. Justanotherguy54 (talk) 09:35, 18 June 2023 (UTC)
- As to the argument that the nuances will become immediately apparent to anyone who follows up on the source, well, the simple reality is that while, as encyclopedists, we would always advise a reader to check into the sources, the vast majority simply do not, which is one of several important reasons that we construct our content to be as facially neutral as possible in the first impression. Further, I think Fuwas proposed compromise is a more than fair middle ground: there's a decent WP:WEIGHT/WP:MEDRS argument to be made here for excluding this quasi-armchair psychology altogether, so if Fuwa is proposing to maintain it, but suggests merely that the most potentially misleading and problematic part me excised, I think that's reasonable. Mind you, this is a bit of an atypical case: often one of the first things you want to consider doing when the neutrality of a statement is in question is ask whether better attribution will fix the issue. But every rule has it's exceptions, and I think this is a good example of that principle.
- I do think it's only fair that I note that I am here by way of looking at old contributions of FlyerReborn, since deceased, who voiced an opinion on related issues above. So it may be that I am operating from a bias here, but I don't think so: I think I would have viewed the issues here in the same way even had I not seen her feedback. Indeed, Flyer actually seems to have argued in the other direction to some extent, insofar as she was in favour of maintaining certain other references to deviance (albeit by virtue of pointing out the lack of connection between this paraphilia and certain psychological pathologies/criminal offenses). But those were different cases and the functions of those references are very valuable for clarifying matters for the reader, whereas I think the disputed language in this instance actually implies a link and thereby confuses the issue. SnowRise 10:13, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- Justanotherguy54, I'm very sorry, but I had to rollback your last two edits: they just made a complete mess of the talk page formatting and discussion, and made your new comments and the post you were trying to embed unreadable. I couldn't even figure out what was meant to go where and at what level of WP:INDENT because it was such a mess. Could you please reintroduce your thoughts through the normal UI when you have an opportunity? Also, please don't copy and paste another user's entire post again, including signature, as that only confuses matters further. Consider instead using the {{tq|quoted text}} template to quote the portions you want to respond to. Apologies: I don't like to refactor, let alone delete, another user's TP contributions, but it really was going to destroy any readability of the page. SnowRise 05:45, 2 July 2023 (UTC)
- I'm really not sure why @Justanotherguy54 is so hell-bent on adding this passage even though the consensus seems to be that the source is weak and that criminologists are being given undue weight in the context of the psychiatric, psychological and sexological origins of paraphilia...
- I wonder if this isn't something we need further mediation to handle, because it seems like we've now lost the thread of communication on this issue, leaving only an edit war. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 09:20, 17 December 2023 (UTC)
- Justanotherguy54, I'm very sorry, but I had to rollback your last two edits: they just made a complete mess of the talk page formatting and discussion, and made your new comments and the post you were trying to embed unreadable. I couldn't even figure out what was meant to go where and at what level of WP:INDENT because it was such a mess. Could you please reintroduce your thoughts through the normal UI when you have an opportunity? Also, please don't copy and paste another user's entire post again, including signature, as that only confuses matters further. Consider instead using the {{tq|quoted text}} template to quote the portions you want to respond to. Apologies: I don't like to refactor, let alone delete, another user's TP contributions, but it really was going to destroy any readability of the page. SnowRise 05:45, 2 July 2023 (UTC)
- I do think it's only fair that I note that I am here by way of looking at old contributions of FlyerReborn, since deceased, who voiced an opinion on related issues above. So it may be that I am operating from a bias here, but I don't think so: I think I would have viewed the issues here in the same way even had I not seen her feedback. Indeed, Flyer actually seems to have argued in the other direction to some extent, insofar as she was in favour of maintaining certain other references to deviance (albeit by virtue of pointing out the lack of connection between this paraphilia and certain psychological pathologies/criminal offenses). But those were different cases and the functions of those references are very valuable for clarifying matters for the reader, whereas I think the disputed language in this instance actually implies a link and thereby confuses the issue. SnowRise 10:13, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
Is "TB/DL" appropriate for inclusion? If so, how should it be included?
In a recent edit I removed a clumsily tacked on bit describing "TB/DL", which is "AB/DL" expression when practiced by people below the age of consent.
The main reason for my reversion of this change was grammatical and to preserve readability, but as these terms a may refer to a potentially sexual activity of minors it's also worth being careful and precise with how this kind of content is handled (both for the safety of minors, and to prevent any unnecessary confusion or conflation of adult paraphilic infantilism with minors).
As this page is mainly focused on adult expression so far, personally I'm not sure that "TB/DL" is appropriate for inclusion and may instead warrant its own page, so as to not muddy the waters or over-complicate things.
However if you feel that "TB/DL" is appropriate for inclusion in this page, please make your case here and describe how it should be done in accordance with the goals and standards of Misplaced Pages. FuwaFuwaDL (talk) 18:10, 25 May 2024 (UTC)
- What would be put on a supposed “TB/DL" page if that term refers to minors under the age of consent? Not appropriate for inclusion anywhere. Justanotherguy54 (talk) 13:50, 4 June 2024 (UTC)