Wikipedia:Amnesia test
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Essay on editing Wikipedia
This is an essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
This page in a nutshell: If you can't write an article after leaving all your prior knowledge about the subject behind, it fails the amnesia test, and regardless of how many external links you can dig up that relate to the subject, those links don't satisfy notability guidelines. |
If you're thinking of starting an article about something, chances are you know a bit about it already. But editors that have been around Wikipedia for a while will know that many articles are
WP:WINI
, and so on).
If you do a
WP:CORP) and the like, and thus be safe from Wikipedia:Articles for deletion
. Nonetheless, before you start creating the article, it's a good idea to take the following steps:
- Forget everything you know about the subject (or act as though you know absolutely nothing about the subject).
- Re-read the 'non-trivial published works' and 'press coverage' you found, and learn everything you can.
- Start writing your article, using only information from the sources that you found. If you find that you have nothing to write, don't write anything.
The notability guidelines are there as a means to ensuring that an article can be verifiable (which requires reliable sources) and neutral (which requires at least one person independent of the subject who thinks it's worth writing and maintaining an article on them). Meeting them is not a standard for inclusion.
The Amnesia test is also useful when participating in
Articles for deletion
discussions.
See also
- Wikipedia:Stop writing
- Wikipedia:Verifiability, not truth
- User:Uncle G/On notability § Writing about subjects close to you
- Doublethink