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tomatosource wrote:OK So I had some spare time and decided to knock together a program to this for me, turns out on average of 1000 pages polled it takes 15.651423 links to get to Philosophy and that one in every ~200ish pages gets itself into a loop or does not have any sufficient links. If anyone wants to see a few thousand long list of articles with their corresponding link distances / error message let me know.
dangermusic wrote:tomatosource wrote:OK So I had some spare time and decided to knock together a program to this for me, turns out on average of 1000 pages polled it takes 15.651423 links to get to Philosophy and that one in every ~200ish pages gets itself into a loop or does not have any sufficient links. If anyone wants to see a few thousand long list of articles with their corresponding link distances / error message let me know.
What I would really like to see is a graphic representing the frequency of different articles at each of the last few steps before Philosophy. It seems like most of the time it's through Mathematics, via Information... it would be cool to see the "tree" of links leading towards Philosophy...
frede wrote:What I would really like to see are some statistics showing what wiki-pages are part of the self-referencing loops and how many pages that will result in ending up in that loop.
Like for instance it might show that you'd end up in a loop containing the page "Philosophy" a certain percentage of the time.
Also the average "distance" from some random page to any one page in these loops would also be quite interesting. I think it would definitely show something interesting about the inner structure of Wikipedia and to some extend the collective human knowledge hierarchy.
One of my friends studying Philosophy likes to claim that his subject is the "highest form of knowledge", I'm not sure what exactly he means by that, but this little discovery does go a way of showing some interesting relationship between Phil. and other subjects.
suweid wrote:Blew my extended mind right off! It's true! I tested on three articles!
darazan wrote:Unless I've missed some links, I've found a loop with the word "solid" (Solid>Three Classical States of Matter>Forces between Particles>Solid), and there are several words that will link to solid.
Scyrus wrote:I don't understand. I've tried it on many words you people say it loops back, and it always gets to philosophy, I believe half of you aren't following exactly what the alt-text says.
woddfellow2 wrote:I just noticed that if I start at Vim (text editor), I end up in an infinite loop (Computer program, Computer software).
scarletmanuka wrote:Scyrus wrote:I don't understand. I've tried it on many words you people say it loops back, and it always gets to philosophy, I believe half of you aren't following exactly what the alt-text says.
Quite possible, but not necessarily so. As was mentioned several times in the thread, there is one group of moronic vandals editing Wikipedia articles solely to make this work, and another group of moronic vandals editing Wikipedia articles solely to make it fail. Some of the chains posted earlier in the thread have worked at some times and failed at others depending on which group of vandals had gotten to the associated articles most recently.
addams wrote:I like the stars. They are Pretty. I can't name the the star groups. On a good night I can pick out a planet or two.
How did they do it. Long, long time ago people mapped planets and stars. They had no internet. No electricity. No tv. Watching the stars move across th Heavens was entertaining?
EpicanicusStrikes wrote:addams wrote:I like the stars. They are Pretty. I can't name the the star groups. On a good night I can pick out a planet or two.
How did they do it. Long, long time ago people mapped planets and stars. They had no internet. No electricity. No tv. Watching the stars move across th Heavens was entertaining?
Yes, it was. But the more important fact is that there was profit in the act. Once various groups of people stared at them long enough to notice consistancy, they realized that accurately mapping the heavens could provide navigational aid to merchants and trade missions.
addams wrote:EpicanicusStrikes wrote:addams wrote:I like the stars. They are Pretty. I can't name the the star groups. On a good night I can pick out a planet or two.
How did they do it. Long, long time ago people mapped planets and stars. They had no internet. No electricity. No tv. Watching the stars move across th Heavens was entertaining?
Yes, it was. But the more important fact is that there was profit in the act. Once various groups of people stared at them long enough to notice consistancy, they realized that accurately mapping the heavens could provide navigational aid to merchants and trade missions.
Can you find the North Star?
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