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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Non-BPD

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Grace E. Dougle (talk | contribs) at 11:45, 21 February 2007 (→‎[[Non-BPD]]: format). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Non-BPD

Non-BPD (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log)

While the topic this article tries to address is valid, this article is not maintainable. It would have to be rewritten and moved. This is impossible due to editorial gridlock. An article 'owner' has been trying to get rid of the page for more than half a year (strangely enough he never listed it for deletion). Work on this article is impossible (constant deletions reverts and what not appearing on the horizon, most writers will be scared off just like me). There is no benefit in having this article. Whoever wants to write on this topic should recreate the article under a more apporpriate title, probably a broader topic like Relationships with mentally ill people. The topic is more of a self-help-topic which is covered by popular press and psychology. The article owner thinks that only natural science topics should be allowed on Wikipedia and cites numerous policies. (None of the policies confirms that of course.) It is pretty much impossible to cover the topic from the point of view of natural science due to its nature being a self-help-topic. A redirect to Borderline personality disorder would be misleading, because it covers the opposite of the article in question here and there is a whole group of people on this article who all oppose the inclusion of non-empirical research, popular culture material and self-help-literature. Which I agree with, the content of Non-BPD should not be merged into Borderline personality disorder. Keep popular culture topics separate from hard science. There is almost no psychiatric research about the group dynamics in a group with a mentally ill person which is what the sources for this article would be about. Group dynamics is not a subject psychiatry deals with. Delete this article as unnecessary unmaintainable clutter. Grace E. Dougle 11:34, 21 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]