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About Me
For New UserseditWelcome to Wikipedia and Happy Editing! If you're not sure how to edit or just want to learn more, this free workshop on a related site called WikiEducator will teach you the ropes and connect you with some of the friendliest and most enthusiastic people in the wiki world. It's regularly offered as an online course, which I took back when I was a novice user. My Research ProjectseditDetails about studying these disciplines and discussing the projects with me are on my Wikiversity userpage. Or, I am responsive to email and to posts on my Wikipedia Talk page. Activeedit
Less Activeedit
Essays Under Revisionedit
I am also involved with editing articles about Judaism and Jewish history. As an avid reader and a mythology buff who loves tales of little folk that beat the odds, I'm proud to be part of that particular story. If you're interested or just curious, go ahead and leave me a message. In the meantime, here are some of my favorite links about the topic:
...and spiced with antinomianism!editJacobFrank purification through transgression was my alternate account, named after an 18th-century Jewish religious leader who promoted "redemption through sin." To quote Max I. Dimont, Jewish history is not only "replete with revered prophets, rabbis and scholars" but also has some of "the most magnificent psychos and crackpots, adventurers and charlatans the world has ever beheld." Please take the trouble to meet these colorful people (of both varieties). You may also want to see the article about Frankism, which I started. I originally developed the JacobFrank Userpage for Wikiversity, as a sort of commentary on a particularly egregious incident of "ethical breaching experiments" there. Another User had created a Wikiversity page describing how, under the guise of research, he had added misinformation to a prominent page of Wikipedia. This event was reported in the Wikipedia Signpost, and Wikiversity's policies were changed accordingly. The attention the incident received, far greater than what us more lawfully-aligned editors bring to the site, led to a number of positive developments on Wikiversity. While I don't condone vandalism, including the deliberate spreading of misinformation, the incident made me wonder whether Jacob Frank's idea that repentance could overcompensate for wrongdoing was actually on the mark once in a while. Your positive contributions to Wikiversity, and mine, will help overcome the damage that was done. My Awardsedit
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