Others may feel differently but that's why I wanted to try this.
]]>Can we start a new thread for these two?
Ryan Budney's idea was to "start a thread that systematically identifies closed threads with at least one delete vote", so I continued here (and I'd assume the same is true for darijgrinberg). That being said as there was so much discussion on the first, on the one hand it might still be good to have a separate thread, though the question is do we then do a thread for each case or is the idea rather to start a new 'systematic' thread'?
On the other hand, in my opinion, the two new ones are relatively clear case for non-deletion; except I am missing something or we start a mass-deletion of non-research content. (The reason these got delete votes at all, I'd speculate, is mainly due to the fact that OP did several [annoying, IMO] edits bumping various of their questions at once.)
]]>We can clear delete votes and remind users that deleting a question with multiple answers also deletes all these answers.
Which to me suggested that the presence of the answers is in your opinion reason against deletion, while apparently in this case some (including me) think it is rather reason for deletion . So, this suggests to me that either you have a completely different opinion on this or this is a purely formalistic reason, in any case both interpretations were surprising to me.
And, while I see some merit to have this as a rule of thumb "do not delete substantive answers in the process" I think the emphasize should be on substantive (which is not synonymous with several and/or long ones, IMO).
]]>But while I have a clear preference for this being deleted, I wlll not further insist on it. In any case, I think creating such a thread was very good idea, thank you for doing it.
]]>Also, I do not really see an argument against deletion. It seems there is agreement it has 0 content, it being closed this is unlikely to change, so why should this stay around. And it seems OP left the site 6 weeks ago (after asking this one question), so it seems even unlikely they will mind or even notice. The only reason seems to be on some purely formalistic grounds because it has answers (and upvotes).
@fedja: a question of this type could be a lot more sophisticated. If this should be a math philospohy question, then this is a scientific/scholarly activity, so I do not see why research-level should be meaningless here. I do agree in particular in this direction we should be a bit more generous and alow general interest questions more freely, but that one really seems like an outgrowth of idle and uninformed or at best half-informed couriosity.
]]>I wan't advocating deletion, nor the opposite. I thought I should start this thread because I've seen a few instances where people were upset either a question or an answer they were invested in was deleted. The thread I linked to above seemed to be very much on that borderline (or perhaps beyond it) where we typically do not delete. So I wanted to make sure we were aware of it. The idea being that if we systematically point out these cases we can converge on some kind of community consensus, and help new 10k+ users observe what the consensus is.
I thought we should have a regular thread where these borderline issues can be discussed. It seems to happen often-enough to deserve it.
On this particular thread I think yes maybe we should keep the thread around. But I don't have very strong opinions on it. I'm mainly just striving to get some kind of consensus.
]]>For the question: The question is written quite naively on a subject that might or might not be on-topic. In any case, it does not seem like a research-level question by a huge margin.
For the answers: two are very short and just speculation, specifically note "maybe the idea can be worked into" and "Perhaps this idea can be used", resp. (While the question asks if there is a field of mathematics that deals with this.) without any detail (except for some links for quantum mechanics, for context, but this is very stanadrd information anyway). One is long and puts forward in a perhaps somewhat eloquent way "something".
There seems to be no content worth preserving and so this question could be deleted without loss. The reason why it should be deleted is that this type of content (as well as several other forms of content) have a tendency to attract contributions (and contributors) that constitue (and create, resp.) further additional undesirable content (undesirable, in my opinion at least). The question being closed is no real measure against this (eg, spin-off question can be create).
]]>Second part (written as a moderator, not a regular user):
Indeed, the proper course of action to delete such a question is to discuss the issue here. (Or, when the circumstances are too delicate for this, to consult the moderators via email. We will either take immediate action or initiate a discussion for you, as appropriate for the case.) It's still a good idea to clear delete flags while the discussion is happening since the question needs to remain visible for the discussion to make sense to everyone.
In this particular case, if the real goal is to delete a particular answer, it's best to go through the moderators who can do that without deleting the entire questions. (Note that after migration, users will be able to vote to delete answers.)
]]>Are you personally against deletion of it? (Because if you are not, and noone else is either, then let us delete it.)
And I think everybody is aware of the fact that the answers will also be deleted, but then in this case while there are three, none of them seems really worth preserving (perhaps none's is relatively best. And that long one did you read it? "Mathematics has been defined as discourse (about the universe of discourse) but of course it occurs inside of our universe with limited ressources." And, just yesterday a "collleague" of OP of answer explained us what this is supposed to mean for normal numbers...).
]]>To start things off, I present:
http://mathoverflow.net/questions/127190/is-there-an-observer-dependent-mathematics-closed
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