Talk:Craig S. Kaplan
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Notability
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IMO he clearly fails Wikipedia:Notability (academics). - Altenmann >talk 18:21, 6 August 2023 (UTC) Hi Altenmann, I just saw that you added a notability-sign at this page. However, this year, Kaplan together with three co-authors has solved the biggest open problem in the mathematical field of Tiling theory -- a problem that was open for more than 50 years. The solution has sparked massive public attentions. I have added these infos now in the introduction (which -- for whatever reason, has not been mentioned there yet [note: i didnt create this page]). Let me cite from the notability criteria: - Basic criteria: "If the depth of coverage in any given source is not substantial, then multiple independent sources may be combined to demonstrate notability; trivial coverage of a subject by secondary sources is not usually sufficient to establish notability." - Clearly yes, it was mentioned in the NYTM, Guardian, Quanta, Numberphile (multiple times, including a 30mins interview), and many other sources. (i included these now) - Any biography: "The person has made a widely recognized contribution that is part of the enduring historical record in a specific field" - Clearly yes, has solved the biggest, 50year open problem in the field. (i clarified this now in the intro). I believe before, it was a problem with the presentation and i hope my modification helped to clarify this. Do you think that the notability is proven enough, and we can remove the note? Thanks for your work! -- Mario23 (talk) 20:08, 4 September 2023 (UTC)
People keep asking on my talk page for my impression, so here it is. I think the einstein tile thing is WP:BIO1E. If that's all we're hanging notability on, we don't have cause for a separate article. He does have some other respectably-cited work on computer graphics [1], but that's a high-citation field. So I think the case is borderline. Not at the level where I'd push to get it deleted, but probably also not at the level where I'd create it, either. There is some popular-press coverage in major media of his past work, though: [2] [3] [4], which pushes me more toward the keep side of things. If we have an article, it should be more balanced, rather than spending so much of its space on filler material on the einstein tile that is not about Kaplan at all. —David Eppstein (talk) 06:43, 10 September 2023 (UTC)
After reading the wikipedia article and looking at some of the references, I have to agree with @Altenmann that the covering of the section "Solving the Einstein problem" is a little misleading. It seems to imply that Kaplan was the main person responsible for the breakthrough. At no point is it mentioned that the einstein tile was found by David Smith. And also Kaplan was just one person of a team of mathematicians involved with the problem. So it's hard to say what the contribution of every single person was. This is not to say that his contribution was negligible, but the article does not seem properly balanced. — Preceding unsigned comment added by PatrickR2 (talk • contribs) 02:55, 11 September 2023 (UTC) |
Photograph was taken by an acquaintance of the subject
[edit]I removed the banner {{Connected contributor}} with content |User1=Joseph Petrik|U1-EH=yes|U1-declared=yes
from this page. It was added in the interest of full disclosure that the photographer who added the image File:Professor Craig S. Kaplan.jpg to the page, user:Joseph Petrik, personally knows the subject Craig Kaplan, and wanted to be up front and transparent about that relationship. Thanks to Joseph Petrik for your contribution, and I applaud your efforts at transparency. I am taking the banner down because I think it's excessively in the face of future readers of the talk page, but I'm putting a comment here to acknowledge the connection, to preserve the show of transparency. I don't think there's any significant conflict of interest in adding a nice photograph of an acquaintance to a Wikipedia article about them. This particular image doesn't seem to be particularly promotional or problematic in any way. (Though it does nicely show off the handsome subject.) All the best. –jacobolus (t) 09:27, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
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