Yes, every group has their own wiki pages right now. Currently, wiki permissions have to be granted manually and are given site-wide, but it will probably be made group-specific at some point.
Yes, every group has their own wiki pages right now.
Currently, wiki permissions have to be granted manually and are given site-wide, but it will probably be made group-specific at some point.
I think you might be a little confused about the current state of the site. You can look at the current list of groups here. None exist outside of those, and any talk about groups not on that list...
I think you might be a little confused about the current state of the site. You can look at the current list of groups here. None exist outside of those, and any talk about groups not on that list is speculative or taking into account that popular tags within a group will eventually be used to create new groups. So if there's a "biblical" tag in ~humanities, it may eventually become a group...but for now it is just a tag that you can sort by.
Each of the groups in the list I linked have wikis and if you wanted to work on a wiki page that might eventually be in a "deeper" group like your example of ~humanities.biblical.academic, you could make a page attached to the group that already exists. For ~humanities, you can do that here.
Just to add to @Whom's great explanation... I do not expect that we will have a ~humanities.biblical.academic sub-group. I originally requested a ~humanities group in order to cover the various...
(Of course, it's possible that some of these sub-groups would become top-level groups in their own right, but the overall principle will probably still apply.)
Yes, every group has their own wiki pages right now.
Currently, wiki permissions have to be granted manually and are given site-wide, but it will probably be made group-specific at some point.
You already have wiki permissions, you requested it in the announcement post that @Bauke linked. You can create and edit pages in all groups.
I think you might be a little confused about the current state of the site. You can look at the current list of groups here. None exist outside of those, and any talk about groups not on that list is speculative or taking into account that popular tags within a group will eventually be used to create new groups. So if there's a "biblical" tag in ~humanities, it may eventually become a group...but for now it is just a tag that you can sort by.
Each of the groups in the list I linked have wikis and if you wanted to work on a wiki page that might eventually be in a "deeper" group like your example of ~humanities.biblical.academic, you could make a page attached to the group that already exists. For ~humanities, you can do that here.
Just to add to @Whom's great explanation...
I do not expect that we will have a ~humanities.biblical.academic sub-group.
I originally requested a ~humanities group in order to cover the various branches of the Humanities discipline:
TheologyReligion (people don't like me using the formal term)LinguisticsLanguage (people don't like me using the formal term)(I figure the arts are covered by ~creative and ~books and ~tv and ~movies and ~music.)
As such, I expect the first level of sub-groups in ~humanities to be:
I then further expect that the next level of sub-groups would include:
... and so on.
A sub-group about an academic study of the Bible would then fall somewhere under ~humanities.religion.christianity.
(Of course, it's possible that some of these sub-groups would become top-level groups in their own right, but the overall principle will probably still apply.)