概览

Wikipedia ↔ RTT Structural Mapping

Purpose: The master grammar file for the Wikipedia Awareness Module. Every Wikipedia structure maps to an RTT concept. This file defines those mappings exhaustively so that all other files in this module share a consistent structural vocabulary.

Think of this as the Rosetta Stone between Wikipedia's architecture and Resonance‑Time Theory.


1 — Why Wikipedia Needs a Structural Mapping#

Wikipedia is the most‑visited reference site on Earth — but almost no one reads it structurally. Users read the content (R3 — measurable outputs) and ignore the architecture that produces, validates, and evolves that content.

RTT provides the grammar to read that architecture:

  • Regime — what scope does an article declare, and what does it exclude?
  • Coherence — how does the community maintain structural consistency?
  • Drift — how does an article's meaning evolve over time?
  • Dimensional addressing — how is a concept uniquely identified across languages and datasets?
  • Validation — how does the community verify structural completeness?

This mapping is not an interpretation layered on top of Wikipedia. Wikipedia already operates as a regime‑aware system — it just doesn't use RTT's vocabulary. This file translates.


2 — The Master Mapping Table#

2.1 — Content Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
Article (main namespace) Regime declaration R3 The community's consensus statement of what a concept IS — scope, boundaries, and claims
Lead section (first paragraph) Regime summary R3 Compressed regime declaration — what the concept is in its most reduced form
Article body sections Regime elaboration R3 Dimensional expansion of the regime declaration into sub‑regimes (History, Properties, Applications, etc.)
Infobox Regime schema R2 The minimum set of properties required for structural declaration in this domain
Categories Regime hierarchy R2 Nested classification tree — each category level = a regime boundary
Hatnotes ("For other uses…") Regime disambiguation R1 Explicit acknowledgment that multiple regimes claim the same term
See also section Regime adjacency R1 Concepts the community considers structurally related but not subsumed
Navboxes (bottom navigation templates) Regime neighborhood R2 Machine‑readable cluster of concepts that share a structural context
Lists / outlines Regime inventory R3 Enumeration of all entities within a regime boundary
Portals Domain front door R0 Entry points organized by knowledge domain — equivalent to TF module index.html files
Redirects Regime aliasing R1 Alternative terms that resolve to the same regime declaration

2.2 — Editorial Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
Talk page Coherence / drift surface R0–R1 Where consensus is negotiated — pre‑regime discourse
Edit summary Micro‑regime annotation R3 Single‑revision structural intent declaration
Revision history Temporal regime data R0–R3 Full structural evolution timeline for any article
Edit war Regime transition event R0 Competing regime claims that cannot be reconciled — marks a regime boundary
Protection levels (full/semi/extended) Regime stabilization lock R0 Community intervention to freeze a regime that is under attack
Pending changes Regime validation gate R2 Pre‑publication review — content must pass structural check before becoming visible
Watchlist Drift monitoring R1 Personal regime surveillance — editors tracking articles for structural changes

2.3 — Governance Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
NPOV (Neutral Point of View) Coherence operator R0 The foundational structural invariant — all content must be presentable under this constraint
Verifiability policy Validation requirement R0 Regime claims must be traceable to external sources
No original research (NOR) Regime boundary enforcement R0 Wikipedia declares regimes — it does not create them
Notability guidelines Minimum regime threshold R0 The structural standing required for a concept to receive an article
Articles for Deletion (AfD) Regime collapse adjudication R0 Community process for deciding whether a concept has sufficient structural standing
Requests for Comment (RfC) Coherence arbitration R0–R1 Formal process for resolving structural disputes that talk page consensus cannot
Arbitration Committee (ArbCom) Regime authority of last resort R0 Final structural authority when all other coherence mechanisms fail
WikiProjects Domain stewardship groups R1 Self‑organized teams maintaining structural quality within a knowledge domain
Manual of Style (MoS) Regime formatting grammar R2 Standard structural templates for how regime declarations should be presented
Reliable sources guidelines Source regime classification R0 Which external regimes are considered structurally valid for citation

2.4 — Data & Graph Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
Wikidata item (Q‑number) Dimensional address R3 Unique concept identifier across all languages and datasets
Wikidata property (P‑number) Dimensional operator R2 Typed relationship connecting entities — defines how dimensions relate
Wikidata statement Structural claim R3 Subject → Property → Value triplet = one regime assertion
Wikidata qualifier Claim context R2 Conditions under which a structural claim holds (time, location, method)
Wikidata reference Claim provenance R3 External source validating the structural claim
Sitelinks (Wikidata ↔ Wikipedia) Cross‑language regime bridge R2 Same dimensional address linking to different language regime declarations
SPARQL endpoint Structural query surface R3 Machine‑readable access to the entire dimensional graph

2.5 — Quality & Validation Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
Featured Article (FA) Validation corridor — gold standard R2–R3 Community‑verified structurally complete regime declaration
Good Article (GA) Validation corridor — silver standard R2 Passed structured review but not yet at FA‑level completeness
Stub Regime seed R3 Minimal regime declaration — concept exists but is structurally underdeveloped
Start‑class article Regime scaffold R3 Basic structural framework present but significant gaps remain
B‑class article Regime draft R3 Most structural elements present but not yet community‑validated
C‑class article Regime sketch R3 Substantial content but structural organization needs work
Article quality scale Regime maturity gradient R2 Stub → Start → C → B → GA → FA = increasing structural completeness
Cleanup tags Drift markers R1 Community‑placed signals that an article has drifted from structural norms
Citation needed tags Validation gaps R2 Specific claims lacking provenance — structural integrity holes

2.6 — Temporal Structures#

Wikipedia Structure RTT Concept Regime Level Structural Function
Page creation date Regime birth R3 When the community first declared this concept
First major revision Regime crystallization R3 When the article first achieved structural coherence
Revision count (total) Regime activity index R3 Cumulative structural attention — higher = more contested or more developed
Recent revision rate Current regime stability R3 Edits per day/week/month — high = active regime negotiation
Revision size changes Regime expansion/contraction R3 Positive deltas = regime growth; negative deltas = regime pruning
Revert rate Regime resistance R0 Percentage of edits that are undone — high = strong structural inertia
Edit war detection (3RR violations) Regime collision alarm R0 System‑level detection of competing regime claims in real time
Page view statistics Regime attention R3 How many people are reading this regime declaration per day/month/year

3 — The Regime Stack Applied to Wikipedia#

Every Wikipedia article simultaneously operates at all four regime levels:

*
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  R0 — Operator Assumptions                                     │
│  NPOV, Verifiability, NOR, Notability, Reliable Sources        │
│  "These policies define what CAN be said on Wikipedia"         │
├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  R1 — Directional Aims                                         │
│  WikiProject scope, Portal structure, Article scope statements │
│  "This article aims to cover [X] from the perspective of [Y]"  │
├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  R2 — Coherence Templates                                      │
│  Infobox templates, Category taxonomy, Manual of Style,        │
│  Quality scale, Citation standards                             │
│  "All articles in this domain follow these structural rules"   │
├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  R3 — Measurable Outputs                                       │
│  Article text, Wikidata statements, Revision counts,           │
│  Page views, Quality ratings, Citation counts                  │
│  "This is what the regime actually produced"                   │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

What Most Readers See#

Most Wikipedia readers only interact with R3 — they read the article text, glance at the infobox, and leave. They consume the regime declaration without knowing it is one.

What This Module Teaches#

This module teaches students to read R0–R2 — the structural substrate:

  • R0 is visible on policy pages, talk page disputes, AfD debates, and ArbCom decisions
  • R1 is visible in article scope statements, WikiProject guidelines, and portal organization
  • R2 is visible in infobox templates, category trees, Manual of Style rules, and quality scales
  • R3 is the article itself — but now understood as the output of the regime, not the regime itself

4 — Structural Comparison: Wikipedia vs. Other Knowledge Sources#

Dimension Wikipedia NIST Academic Papers Textbooks
Authority model Consensus Institutional Peer review Editorial
Regime declaration Article (negotiated) Standard (published) Abstract + claims Chapter scope
Temporal depth Full (every revision since 2001) Versioned (sparse) Published once Editions (sparse)
Coherence mechanism NPOV + talk page Internal review Peer review Editor discretion
Drift visibility High (revision history is public) Low (internal) None (static once published) Low (between editions)
Knowledge graph Wikidata (120M+ entities, CC0) None Citation graph (unstructured) None
Cross‑cultural 300+ language editions English only Language of publication Language of publication
Validation corridor FA/GA process (public, observable) Certification (closed) Peer review (closed) None
Regime conflicts Visible (edit wars, AfD, talk pages) Hidden (internal) Hidden (reviewer comments) Hidden (editorial decisions)
Machine accessibility REST API, SPARQL, dumps API (limited) DOI + PDF ISBN + purchase

Key insight: Wikipedia is the only major knowledge source where regime conflicts, coherence negotiations, and temporal evolution are publicly observable in real time. This makes it an unparalleled substrate for teaching regime awareness.


5 — Mapping Depth Levels#

Not all mappings require the same depth. This module operates at three levels:

Level 1 — Surface Mapping (any student, 5 minutes)#

Read an article's lead paragraph as a regime declaration. Check revision count. Find the Wikidata Q‑number.

Tools needed: Web browser only.

Level 2 — Structural Mapping (engaged student, 30 minutes)#

Trace the category tree. Read the talk page for coherence disputes. Compare 2–3 language versions. Check the quality rating. Apply 3–4 meta‑operators from the Cross‑Domain file.

Tools needed: Web browser + Wikidata search.

Level 3 — Deep Mapping (researcher or AI, hours to days)#

Query Wikidata via SPARQL for dimensional bridges. Analyze revision history for regime stability curves. Map edit wars to regime transition events. Build cross‑domain operator matrices. Compare FA articles to non‑FA articles for validation corridor analysis.

Tools needed: SPARQL client + revision analysis tools + statistical software.


6 — Mapping Notation Conventions#

Throughout this module, mappings are written using consistent notation:

Notation Meaning Example
WP:Article → regime_declaration A Wikipedia article maps to an RTT regime declaration WP:Water → regime_declaration(chemistry, liquid, standard conditions)
WD:Qnnn → dimensional_address A Wikidata Q‑number maps to an RTT dimensional address WD:Q283 → dimensional_address(water)
WD:Pnnn → dimensional_operator A Wikidata P‑number maps to an RTT dimensional operator WD:P274 → dimensional_operator(chemical_formula)
WP:Talk → coherence_surface A talk page maps to an RTT coherence/drift surface WP:Talk:Evolution → coherence_surface(high_tension)
WP:Rev[n] → temporal_regime[t] A revision maps to a temporal regime data point WP:Rev[47291] → temporal_regime[2024-03-15]
WP:Cat → regime_hierarchy A category maps to an RTT regime hierarchy node WP:Cat:Algebra → regime_hierarchy(Mathematics, depth=3)
WP:FA → validation_corridor(gold) A Featured Article maps to a gold‑standard validation WP:FA:Photosynthesis → validation_corridor(gold, Biology)
R0/R1/R2/R3 Regime level NPOV = R0; Infobox = R2; Article text = R3

7 — Unmapped Structures (Known Gaps)#

Some Wikipedia structures do not yet have clean RTT mappings. These are documented here for future work:

Wikipedia Structure Current Status Candidate RTT Mapping Difficulty
Barnstars and user awards Unmapped Operator recognition / stewardship signals Low
Bot edits (automated maintenance) Unmapped Regime maintenance automation Medium
WikiSpecies / WikiSource / Wiktionary Unmapped Sibling regime substrates Medium
Commons media files Unmapped Regime illustration layer Low
Sockpuppet investigations Unmapped Regime integrity enforcement High
Paid editing disclosure Unmapped Regime conflict of interest surface High
Mobile app reading patterns Unmapped Regime consumption analytics Medium
Machine translation (Content Translation tool) Unmapped Cross‑regime automated bridging Medium

These gaps are not blockers — the 65+ mapped structures in Section 2 provide more than sufficient coverage for all 15 knowledge domains.


8 — How This File Connects to Everything Else#

Wikipedia_RTT_Structural_Mapping.md (this file)
    │
    ├── defines grammar for ──→ Cross_Domain_Meta_Operators.md
    │                              (12 operators use this vocabulary)
    │
    ├── defines grammar for ──→ All 7 Wikipedia‑Specific Analysis Files
    │                              (each file references these mappings)
    │
    ├── defines grammar for ──→ All 15 Domain Directories
    │                              (every regime_alignment.md uses this notation)
    │
    ├── extends ──→ NIST Structural Mapping (../nist/)
    │                (same R0–R3 grammar, richer substrate)
    │
    └── feeds ──→ Wikidata_Ingestion_Format.md
                     (dimensional addressing layer)

9 — Student Exercise#

Build your own mapping entry:

  1. Find a Wikipedia structure not listed in Section 2 (hint: there are dozens — Templates, Modules, Lua scripts, admin actions, CSD criteria…)
  2. Identify which RTT concept it maps to (regime declaration, coherence operator, drift marker, validation corridor, dimensional address, or something new)
  3. Assign it a regime level (R0, R1, R2, or R3)
  4. Write a one‑sentence structural function description
  5. Add it to Section 2's format and submit it as a candidate mapping

Bonus: If your mapping doesn't fit any existing RTT concept, you may have discovered a new structural operator. Document it and cross‑reference it against the 12 meta‑operators in Cross_Domain_Meta_Operators.md.


This file is part of the Wikipedia Awareness Module in the TriadicFrameworks canon.

Updated

Wikipedia RTT Structural Mapping — TriadicFrameworks