Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Hyperculturality
Tools
Actions
General
Print/export
In other projects
Appearance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This page is an archive of the discussion about the proposed deletion of the article below. This page is no longer live. Further comments should be made on the article's talk page rather than here so that this page is preserved as an historic record.
The result of the debate was delete.
3 "delete" votes, no evidence countering the assertion that this is a neologism except for one anecdote. 1 unsigned vote discounted. My own research turns up nothing to convince me that this word ever left the neologism stage. Rossami (talk) 23:29, 17 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
This term appears to be a neologism recently coined by a German professor and it gets zero Google hits. Further, it is simply a definition. -Willmcw 22:12, May 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Delete, zero Google hits. - SimonP 22:32, May 10, 2005 (UTC)
- Keep, I used the term in many of my writings in the late 80s & it was already in use then. But I don't understand why the term isn't hyperculture rather than hypercultuality. Ted Nelson, the great hypertext theorist was talking about hyperculture in the early 60s. - Memexikon
- Delete, I'd suggest wiktionary but the word isn't in common use. --Gmaxwell 19:08, 14 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
- Keep, this article is convincing and it is a good definition. The culture of today has really a net-structure of hypertext (Ted Nelson).
- This page is now preserved as an archive of the debate and, like some other VfD subpages, is no longer 'live'. Subsequent comments on the issue, the deletion, or the decision-making process should be placed on the relevant 'live' pages. Please do not edit this page.