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== Why 6° increments? ==
== Civil, Nautical, & Astronomical - What are the Reasons? ==

What is the purpose for the three different "versions" to twilight? The article mentions that nautical twilight is used in military planning; but is that it's origin? If so, what about the other two? Any addition of this info would greatly help both me, and the article in general. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 19:23, 4 May 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Civil twilight is bright enough that normal daytime activities can be performed without additional lighting. For example, a car can be driven safely without using its headlights. Many jurisdictions have laws that compel drivers to turn their headlights on at civil dusk. Defining the time when this occurs is therefore necessary for the implementation of these laws.

:Nautical twilight is essentially bright enough to allow a ship to be navigated safely without relying on navigational aids such as lighthouses. In warfare, lighthouses cannot be relied on, so planners must ensure that activities will occur when nautical twilight is present.

:Viewing very faint astronomical objects such as distant galaxies can be done only if the sky is almost perfectly dark. Knowing the times of astronomical dusk and dawn allows astronomers to plan their activities appropriately.

:] (]) 20:00, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
::The reference given is a US one. Are these 3definitions US only, or are they recognised internationally? I'vebeen a seaman for 40 years and never heard of them. In the UK lighting-up time is legally defined in terms of minutes after sunset, not solar elevation. The two methods will diverge widely during the year, especially in Shetland -] <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 08:01, 18 February 2014 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:::Interesting question. As far as I can see from http://astro.ukho.gov.uk/nao/miscellanea/birs2.html, the British government uses the same definitions of the three kinds of twilight as we do here. There is also a period called "Hours of Darkness" which extends from 30 minutes after sunset to 30 minutes before sunrise. Laws concerning use of car headlights, etc., are written in terms of hours of darkness. ] (]) 21:53, 18 February 2014 (UTC)

==Shrunk the Gallery==
I thought the gallery was getting out of control, so I deleted and replaced, and moved around some shots, and cut the Gallery to one line. Any of you whose photos didn't make the cut, I promise you that I removed at least as many of my own shots as others when editing. If you want to scream at me, this is the place...:-)→] (]) 17:52, 30 May 2015 (UTC)

== Article contradicts itself on twilight definitions ==

Diagram shows twilight as...

:Civil Twilight: Sun 0-6º below the horizon
:Nautical Twilight: Sun 6-12º below the horizon
:Astronomical Twilight: Sun 12-18º below the horizon

The text in the article shows twilight as...

:Civil Twilight: Sun 0-6º below the horizon
:Nautical Twilight: Sun 0-12º below the horizon
:Astronomical Twilight: Sun 0-18º below the horizon

The diagram is right, not the text. See this article by Cambridge University.

:http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/public/ask/2445 ] (]) 01:30, 20 August 2015 (UTC)

:: See Bowditch's , pp. 227-228 & table 1516, which agrees with the definition as given in the text. ] (]) 14:16, 11 August 2015 (UTC)

:::Further note that the Cambridge web article cited above does not cite a reliable source but only WP (circular reasoning). ] (]) 14:20, 11 August 2015 (UTC)

The American Practical Navigator is a good source you have there. It's possible that it's right. It shows twilight as...

:Civil Twilight: Center of sun 0º50' - 6º below the horizon
:Nautical Twilight: Center of sun 0º50' - 12º below the horizon
:Astronomical Twilight: Center of sun 0º50' - 18º below the horizon

However, the Glossary of Marine Navigation which is put out by the same agency says differently.

http://msi.nga.mil/MSISiteContent/StaticFiles/NAV_PUBS/APN/Gloss-1.pdf#22
:“ civil twilight. . 1. The period of incomplete darkness when the upper limb of the sun is below the visible horizon, and the center of the sun is not more than 6° below the celestial horizon.”
http://msi.nga.mil/MSISiteContent/StaticFiles/NAV_PUBS/APN/Gloss-1.pdf#82
:“ nautical twilight. . 1. The time of incomplete darkness which begins (morning) or ends (evening) when the center of the sun is 12° below the celestial horizon. The times of nautical twilight are tabulated in the nautical twilight are tabulated in the Nautical Almanac; at the times given the horizon is generally not visible and it is too dark for marine sextant observations. See also FIRST LIGHT.”

http://msi.nga.mil/MSISiteContent/StaticFiles/NAV_PUBS/APN/Gloss-1.pdf#9
:“ astronomical twilight. . 1. The period of incomplete darkness when the center of the sun is more than 12° but not more than 18° below the celestial horizon. SEE ALSO CIVIL TWILIGHT, NAUTICAL TWILIGHT.”] (]) 01:30, 20 August 2015 (UTC)

: Evidently, there is much confusion about the definitions (even among those who should know). Perhaps it is best to mention this in the article, the reader can then decide which definition s/he finds most practical. ] (]) 11:21, 16 August 2015 (UTC)

:: That sounds like a good plan.] (]) 01:30, 20 August 2015 (UTC)

:::@Appple please sign your postings by typing four tildes at the end so that I know to whom I am responding. ] (]) 08:06, 17 August 2015 (UTC)

:: Article updated with both definitions. ] (]) 03:09, 20 August 2015 (UTC)

:::As I mentioned earlier, the Cambridge reference ("Ask an Astronomer") is not reliable as it refers to WP as source - so what you have here is circular reasoning. Either substitute it with an another verifiable source or leave it out all together. ] (]) 07:48, 20 August 2015 (UTC)


It seems to me that there ought to be an explanation for this on the page. ] (]) 10:29, 6 November 2023 (UTC)
::::In addition, the "Glossary of Marine Navigation" which you cite for the other definition of twilight is the appendix printed at the end of the "American Practical Navigator". Apparently, the authors of the glossary did not check their facts with the information in the earlier chapters of the manual. ] (]) 07:59, 20 August 2015 (UTC)


== Astronomical twilight: Descriptions vs. images ==
:::::{{ping|AstroLynx}} Why haven't you removed or at least tagged the unreliable source(s)? Readers and editors should be made aware of the sourcing problems. --] (]) 15:25, 22 September 2015 (UTC)


The various images for astronomical twilight don't seem to match the description. The description seems to imply that it is "basically fully dark", differing from true night-time only in that some of the very faintest phenomena will be hidden. But the images seem to be showing a much brighter sky. I'm particularly suspicious of the "Astronomical twilight in Goa" pic in the gallery, as the actual description of the picture doesn't say anything specifically about astronomical twilight. In fact, the description of the pic says that it was taken at 12 January 2011, 18:43:18, which according to calculator should be after twilight has ended, so I would expect the sky to be even darker. Am I misinterpreting something, or are the pictures and/or their descriptions incorrect? ] (]) 15:43, 15 November 2021 (UTC)
::::::I already mentioned in this section that some of the sources used by ] were unreliable. In the mean time I have been looking at some other twilight-related sources but have not yet decided how best to correct the current text. Please feel free to do so yourself if you cannot wait. ] (]) 15:35, 22 September 2015 (UTC)


== Restore "In Religion" section == == Image in the section "Astronomical twilight" ==


]
An argument could be made to restore the "In Religion" section. This section was here for a while with no problem, until I expanded the part about how twilight is used in Christianity. The whole section was then removed because "This is an encyclopedia article about the technical aspects of, and the defining "Twilight"." But, I would argue that a high level encyclopedia article is about the notion of a thing. Just like the article for the "Sun" has a religious aspects section, so too, the twilight article warrants one. It's simply further information related to twilight. The notion of twilight isn't limited to its technical aspects. <small><span class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:03, 24 March 2016 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
I'm suspicious of the second image (at right) at the "]" section. It appears to be an underexposed photograph of a civil twilight rather than an astronomical twilight, especially because no stars can be seen and because of the distinct colours. Should the photo be moved to the correct section or even removed altogether? ] (]) 17:01, 12 April 2023 (UTC)


:I've decided to remove the image. ] (]) 17:30, 19 April 2023 (UTC)
*Totally disagree. I was going to pull the religion section months ago, but have been busy with other projects. This article has slowly been turning into an excuse to pitch religious beliefs. Misplaced Pages educates the reader about science. Lots of things happen at twilight. We don't mention them all because this venue isn't the place for it, and there isn't enough gig space in the universe for all of it. The important things that do happen at twilight, other than plenty of folks sitting down for dinner, have their own articles. My suggestion is to go to the Christianity article, and write about Christian activities that occur during twilight. It will then be in the right place. Please don't take any of this personally my friend, but this isn't Bible class. It's Misplaced Pages. That section ABSOLUTELY does not belong in this article. This article is not the place for those preaching God, and that's just what that section was doing. This isn't the first article I've removed religious sales pitches from, and it won't be the last. Religious sections belong in religious articles. It would be like going to the '''Sun''' article, and mentioning that lots of people go to church when the sun is out. Then we will find in the the '''night''' article saying: "Lots of folks pray during the night". Also, you can't use the Sun article as a comparison, because the Sun was actually thought of "as a God" in ancient times, and that is the reference to it in the article. Apples and Oranges. Subject closed.-] (]) 18:29, 24 March 2016 (UTC)


== Simple approximation? ==
I hear ya. I'm not a zealot or a fanatic or anything. I didn't intend to hijack the article for preaching purposes just to expand on how twilight is significant in the Christian arena. Misplaced Pages educates the reader "period" not just "about science." Going around taking out religious-related material seems a bit anti-religious. It's relevant information to the topic at-hand. Now, if it was blatant proselytizing, I would agree, that it's not proper. Perhaps there is a compromise? I could trim what I submitted to make it simpler, more directly related? I come with good will, with an open mind to your argument. But "subject closed" kinda shuts down the "Talk" doesn't it? ] (]) 21:20, 24 March 2016 (UTC)


It would seem appropriate to include the approximation that the twilight time is inversely proportionate to the cosine of the latitude (e.g. civil twilight =~ 24min/ cos LAT = 48min @ 60degrees). Or am I missing something? ] (]) 21:39, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
*This will be my last reply on the matter: "Wiki educates people period" is the only thing we agree on. Thing is, Wiki educates people in the correct article. The article designed and created to educate the reader about the specific subject he is looking for. I wouldn't be going to the Christianity article to expand on the science of Twilight, just because I heard there was a paragraph there that dealt with what Christians do at twilight time. The subject is "CLOSED" because this is Misplaced Pages's protocol, and I've been helping enforce it for 5 years. You don't come with good will. You come with religion. You are a religious person. A person of faith. Please feel free to contribute to in the articles written by those who also live their lives on faith and not fact. No compromise. I'm sorry, take it where it will be appreciated. There isn't a religion in the world that doesn't have something going on at different times of the year, and all times of the day. Have fun writing about that in the articles designed to expand on them. Happy editing.] (]) 00:53, 25 March 2016 (UTC)


== "Twilight" vs Twilight ==
"You don't come with good will. You come with religion." Wow... so religious people are inherently ill-willed? I live by faith and fact. Faith and Reason are entirely compatible - but, this isn't the place for a discussion on that. I'm just sorry, as a relatively new contributor to wikipedia, to find people on here who squash relevant information just because it is religious in nature. "Articles must represent all significant views fairly, proportionately, and without bias." ] (]) 06:15, 25 March 2016 (UTC)
] You are apparently not aware of the so-called use-mention distinction. Quotes are used for multiple purposes in English, not just to quote someone. One of the uses is to signify that one is referring to the word itself rather than the thing the word normally refers to. Ex: Plants may grow but "plants" has six letters. Do you see? This is an accepted and known fact about English. Please stop undoing the correct changes to signify that in the first paragraph of the article, the last reference is TO THE WORD, not to a time of day. If you insist, it can be italized, but I'd prefer the correct quotes. ] (]) 01:35, 19 November 2024 (UTC)


:@]: The Misplaced Pages article on the ] is an adequate summary of why all lede paragraphs begin with an article title's first mention in boldface type. Subsequent mentions need no further orthographic distinction unless the term is used as a ] for a separate purpose. The twilight article makes no such distinction. The sentence in question is additionally infirm for two other reasons: (1) it violates the ] guidance, and (2) theres's no statement that twilight "can also refer to the periods when this illumination occurs" in the cited reference.
And really all you had to say was, "Hey man, if you'd like to keep the 'In Religion' section, would you mind carving it out into a separate article? Then those who are interested can follow a link and those who aren't can ignore it" and I would have said, "Oh... yeah, sure, no problem." I'm creating a "Twilight (Religious use)" article now. Hopefully you won't mind my simply putting a link to it in the main article. ] (]) 06:55, 25 March 2016 (UTC)
:Those two infirmities don't deeply trouble me, but it's clear throughout most of the reference publishing industry that second or subsequent mentions of a term should not be given any orthographic distinction. That's why I said "see ]" since Misplaced Pages takes the majority view. A minority view allows italics in certain cases, which could be argued here, but you haven't made the relevant point that could justify italics. I'll make the salient point for you: The lede sentence gives a scientific definition; the ensuing sentence gives a a colloquial one. I.e., it's the same word and same ''use'' but separate ] of the word.
:That separate colloquial sense isn't what this article is about, so the entire sentence doesn't rightly belong. I nonetheless see no harm in it despite how other editors might rail how Misplaced Pages is ]. Accordingly, I'm about to use my third reversion to offset your third reversion in a 24-hour period as a way to hold us both accountable to the ] rule. Then I'm going to edit the sentence so that it adheres to the minority reference publishing standard for use-mention distinctions contrary to Wiki guidance on the matter while also addressing items (1) and (2) from above. ] 02:47, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::I'm sorry but you're still not getting it. First, MOS:NOITALIC is not relevant in any way to the reason "twilight" needs to be in quotes. That section refers to occasions when one is using titles and whether or not italics should be used. That has nothing to do with this. It's as if you didn't read or understand what I wrote above.
::I am not talking about introducing a term in text. Yes, that sometimes gets quotes. That is an entirely different topic. Stay with me here, because I think you believe I'm doing this for a reason that has nothing to do with the actual reason. The point has to do with the distinction between using a term and mentioning a term. The first time the term appears in this article is a USE case. (Whether or not editors decide that should be in bold or italic or neither is immaterial to me.) I.e., it is not a MENTION case. The instance I'm using quotes for is a MENTION case. In that case, quotes or italics are required. In most of the rest of the article the term "twilight" is being USED, not mentioned. I.e., it appears as reference to a time of day, not to the word itself. So of course it gets no special quotes or italics or anything. The second instance of the term in the first paragraph of the article is MENTION case. Do you see the distinction? You did not respond to this above. If not, I don't know what: I gave you the relevant WP page for use-mention and you misinterpreted it somehow to have something to do with how often a word is used in an article.
::Also the change you made to the wording and putting "twilight" in italics makes no sense to me. You changed the instance of the term to a use case rather than a mention case so it no longer needs quotes OR italics. ] (]) 03:23, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I stopped reading after "you're still not getting it." I'm open to having a ] conversation about the article but not about opinions regarding editors. ] 06:04, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::::"You're not getting it" is completely civil. You are not appreciating the issue--I don't know how else to say it. It's not an opinion about you either. It's a statement about your response. ] (]) 08:06, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::] > ]''' > ]: "Do not make personal attacks''' anywhere on Misplaced Pages. Comment ], not ]." Opinions about what an editor doesn't get is unrelated to any article. To repeat, ] 06:32, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Hey we have something else to disagree on! Saying someone doesn't get something is not a "personal attack" by any stretch of the imagination. It is, however, related to our discussion. I'll go one further though: even admins dish out and can take rougher discourse than "you're not getting it." ] (]) 08:40, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::The "Comment ], not ]" guidance also applies to uncivil verbiage in edit summaries, e.g.:
:::::::*"I guess '''you''' don't understand the other uses of quotes"
:::::::*"Please stop undoing this necessary change" (i.e., hortative comment re another editor) versus "unncessary change."
:::::::*"Educate '''yourself''': https://en.wikipedia.org/Use%E2%80%93mention_distinction"
:::::::Even "'''User '''is making repeated bold edits without consideration of past editors choices or preferences" is intrinsically uncivil versus "''The edit contrasts'' consideration of past editors' choices or preferences..."
:::::::In retrospect, I'm remiss in not flagging the Wiki's guidance on civility at the outset of this talk page topic. "''You '' are apparently not aware of the so-called use-mention distinction", versus "(I believe) The use-mention distinction applies", should have prompted me accordingly. The relevant guidance: "]." This reply would stand rightly accused of ignoring that very Wiki policy. ] 16:48, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::This is silly. No amount of quoting WP is going to convince anyone that "you're not getting it" is uncivil. But since you won't let go of this notion, I took a few minutes to get more instruction on how to always be civil by glancing at your talk page. Here are some highlights:
::::::::“And now you, , repeatedly refuse or otherwise fail to consider…”
::::::::“It seems you have a some learning to do...”
::::::::“If you had read closely, you'd see that…”
::::::::“I challenge you to shore up your linguistic chops before any reply”
::::::::“It annoys me, however, when people say their preferred way of looking at it is correct, exclusive concepts and opinions to the contrary. You, , have a proclivity for doing precisely that.”
::::::::“I really do get the impression that you're argue not to reach greater understand but to for some other reason that I don't wish to fathom”
::::::::Telling other WP editors that they "repeatedly fail to consider" or "have some learning to do" or that they're not arguing in good faith all seem at least as "uncivil" as "you're not getting it." In fact, they seem worse! You might consider your own behavior before lecturing others on what is and is not civil. ] (]) 21:41, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:I neglected to undo @]'s reversion before editing the text in dispute, but the edit still counts toward my 3RR quota for the day. ] 02:59, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

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Why 6° increments?

It seems to me that there ought to be an explanation for this on the page. JanGB (talk) 10:29, 6 November 2023 (UTC)

Astronomical twilight: Descriptions vs. images

The various images for astronomical twilight don't seem to match the description. The description seems to imply that it is "basically fully dark", differing from true night-time only in that some of the very faintest phenomena will be hidden. But the images seem to be showing a much brighter sky. I'm particularly suspicious of the "Astronomical twilight in Goa" pic in the gallery, as the actual description of the picture doesn't say anything specifically about astronomical twilight. In fact, the description of the pic says that it was taken at 12 January 2011, 18:43:18, which according to this calculator should be after twilight has ended, so I would expect the sky to be even darker. Am I misinterpreting something, or are the pictures and/or their descriptions incorrect? Iapetus (talk) 15:43, 15 November 2021 (UTC)

Image in the section "Astronomical twilight"

I'm suspicious of the second image (at right) at the "Astronomical twilight" section. It appears to be an underexposed photograph of a civil twilight rather than an astronomical twilight, especially because no stars can be seen and because of the distinct colours. Should the photo be moved to the correct section or even removed altogether? Dsuke1998AEOS (talk) 17:01, 12 April 2023 (UTC)

I've decided to remove the image. Dsuke1998AEOS (talk) 17:30, 19 April 2023 (UTC)

Simple approximation?

It would seem appropriate to include the approximation that the twilight time is inversely proportionate to the cosine of the latitude (e.g. civil twilight =~ 24min/ cos LAT = 48min @ 60degrees). Or am I missing something? JdelaF (talk) 21:39, 14 May 2024 (UTC)

"Twilight" vs Twilight

User: Kent Dominic You are apparently not aware of the so-called use-mention distinction. Quotes are used for multiple purposes in English, not just to quote someone. One of the uses is to signify that one is referring to the word itself rather than the thing the word normally refers to. Ex: Plants may grow but "plants" has six letters. Do you see? This is an accepted and known fact about English. Please stop undoing the correct changes to signify that in the first paragraph of the article, the last reference is TO THE WORD, not to a time of day. If you insist, it can be italized, but I'd prefer the correct quotes. Chafe66 (talk) 01:35, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

@Chafe66: The Misplaced Pages article on the Use–mention distinction is an adequate summary of why all lede paragraphs begin with an article title's first mention in boldface type. Subsequent mentions need no further orthographic distinction unless the term is used as a signifier for a separate purpose. The twilight article makes no such distinction. The sentence in question is additionally infirm for two other reasons: (1) it violates the WP:REFERS guidance, and (2) theres's no statement that twilight "can also refer to the periods when this illumination occurs" in the cited reference.
Those two infirmities don't deeply trouble me, but it's clear throughout most of the reference publishing industry that second or subsequent mentions of a term should not be given any orthographic distinction. That's why I said "see MOS:NOITALIC" since Misplaced Pages takes the majority view. A minority view allows italics in certain cases, which could be argued here, but you haven't made the relevant point that could justify italics. I'll make the salient point for you: The lede sentence gives a scientific definition; the ensuing sentence gives a a colloquial one. I.e., it's the same word and same use but separate sense (linguistics) of the word.
That separate colloquial sense isn't what this article is about, so the entire sentence doesn't rightly belong. I nonetheless see no harm in it despite how other editors might rail how Misplaced Pages is not a dictionary. Accordingly, I'm about to use my third reversion to offset your third reversion in a 24-hour period as a way to hold us both accountable to the WP:3RR rule. Then I'm going to edit the sentence so that it adheres to the minority reference publishing standard for use-mention distinctions contrary to Wiki guidance on the matter while also addressing items (1) and (2) from above. Kent Dominic·(talk) 02:47, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
I'm sorry but you're still not getting it. First, MOS:NOITALIC is not relevant in any way to the reason "twilight" needs to be in quotes. That section refers to occasions when one is using titles and whether or not italics should be used. That has nothing to do with this. It's as if you didn't read or understand what I wrote above.
I am not talking about introducing a term in text. Yes, that sometimes gets quotes. That is an entirely different topic. Stay with me here, because I think you believe I'm doing this for a reason that has nothing to do with the actual reason. The point has to do with the distinction between using a term and mentioning a term. The first time the term appears in this article is a USE case. (Whether or not editors decide that should be in bold or italic or neither is immaterial to me.) I.e., it is not a MENTION case. The instance I'm using quotes for is a MENTION case. In that case, quotes or italics are required. In most of the rest of the article the term "twilight" is being USED, not mentioned. I.e., it appears as reference to a time of day, not to the word itself. So of course it gets no special quotes or italics or anything. The second instance of the term in the first paragraph of the article is MENTION case. Do you see the distinction? You did not respond to this above. If not, I don't know what: I gave you the relevant WP page for use-mention and you misinterpreted it somehow to have something to do with how often a word is used in an article.
Also the change you made to the wording and putting "twilight" in italics makes no sense to me. You changed the instance of the term to a use case rather than a mention case so it no longer needs quotes OR italics. Chafe66 (talk) 03:23, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
I stopped reading after "you're still not getting it." I'm open to having a civil conversation about the article but not about opinions regarding editors. Kent Dominic·(talk) 06:04, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
"You're not getting it" is completely civil. You are not appreciating the issue--I don't know how else to say it. It's not an opinion about you either. It's a statement about your response. Chafe66 (talk) 08:06, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
WP:Civility > No personal attacks > Misplaced Pages:No personal attacks: "Do not make personal attacks anywhere on Misplaced Pages. Comment on content, not on the contributor." Opinions about what an editor doesn't get is unrelated to any article. To repeat, "I'm open to having a civil conversation about the article but not about opinions regarding editors." Kent Dominic·(talk) 06:32, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
Hey we have something else to disagree on! Saying someone doesn't get something is not a "personal attack" by any stretch of the imagination. It is, however, related to our discussion. I'll go one further though: even admins dish out and can take rougher discourse than "you're not getting it." Chafe66 (talk) 08:40, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
The "Comment on content, not on the contributor" guidance also applies to uncivil verbiage in edit summaries, e.g.:
Even "User is making repeated bold edits without consideration of past editors choices or preferences" is intrinsically uncivil versus "The edit contrasts consideration of past editors' choices or preferences..."
In retrospect, I'm remiss in not flagging the Wiki's guidance on civility at the outset of this talk page topic. "You are apparently not aware of the so-called use-mention distinction", versus "(I believe) The use-mention distinction applies", should have prompted me accordingly. The relevant guidance: "Stay on the task of creating an encyclopedia. You can chat with people about Misplaced Pages-related topics on their user talk pages." This reply would stand rightly accused of ignoring that very Wiki policy. Kent Dominic·(talk) 16:48, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
This is silly. No amount of quoting WP is going to convince anyone that "you're not getting it" is uncivil. But since you won't let go of this notion, I took a few minutes to get more instruction on how to always be civil by glancing at your talk page. Here are some highlights:
“And now you, , repeatedly refuse or otherwise fail to consider…”
“It seems you have a some learning to do...”
“If you had read closely, you'd see that…”
“I challenge you to shore up your linguistic chops before any reply”
“It annoys me, however, when people say their preferred way of looking at it is correct, exclusive concepts and opinions to the contrary. You, , have a proclivity for doing precisely that.”
“I really do get the impression that you're argue not to reach greater understand but to for some other reason that I don't wish to fathom”
Telling other WP editors that they "repeatedly fail to consider" or "have some learning to do" or that they're not arguing in good faith all seem at least as "uncivil" as "you're not getting it." In fact, they seem worse! You might consider your own behavior before lecturing others on what is and is not civil. Chafe66 (talk) 21:41, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
I neglected to undo @Chafe66's reversion before editing the text in dispute, but the edit still counts toward my 3RR quota for the day. Kent Dominic·(talk) 02:59, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
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