- Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)
I just noticed taht thsi article has been deleted.There appears to be a lot of confusion!Ashoka Prasad and Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad are two different individuals but hoary has apparenetly not looked at the evidence.Jahnavi_parasad was born in 1945 not 1955,is teh author of a book and holds an Honoaray degree from Natal which to me is notable enough.Is there anyway we can device a policy to avoid these confusions?Regards (Delhite (talk) 06:25, 25 January 2008 (UTC))[reply]
- Request moved from talk page. Eluchil404 (talk) 06:34, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Endorse deletion This issue has a long, convoluted history. Much background can be found on the AfD, on the talk page of the recreated article, now preserved here, and an earlier AfD on an alternative spelling of the name. In brief, there is a psychiatrist called Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad, who has a relatively undistinguished publication record consisting of one book and under a dozen papers, yet some overblown claims are being made on his behalf on Wikipedia and elsewhere, going back three years or more [3]. There is a psychiatrist called Ashoka Prasad, whose main claim to fame is being struck off medical registers in at least two countries for scientific fraud, and is apparently a bit of a fantasist.[4][5] The nominating account is a spa whose only edits have been to defend Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad and his article, as here, extensive edits to a page on an obscure book on "1000 top scientists" which allegedly includes AJ Prasad (I am trying to check this, but as it's not in my local library it may take a while; in the meantime the only accounts which claim to have actually read it seem to be the ones promoting Prasad), and most tellingly, creating an attack page on John Funder, who headed the panel which found Ashoka Prasad guilty of misconduct. This is very odd behaviour indeed if, as he/she claims, the two are unrelated people. There are several other accounts and IPs with similar histories, for example [6], [7]. Regardless; if they are different people, I cannot see how Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad is notable enough to merit an article. If, as I suspect, they are the same person there may well be something worth writing about, but I doubt that a BLP compliant article could be written with the sources I've found so far. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 11:30, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Interim comment: AfD/Johnubiprasad is another page that makes interesting reading. On Dr Ashoka Prasad the fraudster, see this BMJ article. For what Wikipedia is worth as a reference source, fr:Ashoka Prasad tells us that Ashoka Jahnavi Prasad est un médecin et psychiatre indien ayant proposé en 1984 le valproate de sodium comme alternative thérapeutique au lithium dans le traitement des troubles bipolaires.[with citation] Il est surtout connu dans les milieux psychiatriques du monde anglo-saxon comme imposteur, faussaire, fraudeur scientifique et auteur d'accusations mensongères à l'encontre des médecins universitaires australiens John Funder et David Copolov and that Il ne doit notamment pas être confondu avec son homonyme Ashoka Jahnnavi Prasad Jr. de l'Indian Institute for Advanced Study, membre honoraire étranger de l'American Academy of Arts and Sciences, élu en 1972 dans la section I:5 (Engineering Sciences and Technologies) de la classe I (Mathématiques et Sciences physiques). -- Hoary (talk) 14:39, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Uphold deletion - enough with the vanity articles already! Madman (talk) 15:01, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Overturn and Send to AfD--both of them. This needs a discussion in the proper place,which isnot deletion review.
As importance asserted for both of them, neither of them is a valid speedy.DGG (talk) 15:12, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Endorse deletion. Meets speedy criteria "Recreation of deleted material" as this has been deleted several times already. No new reliable sources or information has been found to change the reasons for deletion. I find it hard to believe that the fraudster[8] and the great psychiatrist[9] are both a "great grandson of First president of India" yet separate people with the same name. This is yet another attempt by fans of Prasad to create a vanity article full of the usual rubbish. That 1000 scientists article should be AfD'd too as it is just another vanity page for some obscure book by an obscure Indian publishing house. The valproate claim isn't backed up by the source supplied (see earlier AfD). Someone should tell the French they've copied some English bollocks. Colin°Talk 15:37, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- I think there is some reason to think that his career is notable as a fraudster, and thus an article would be justified. The BMJ reference is sufficient to meet BLP concerns. DGG (talk) 16:55, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- An article built from reliable sources would be AfD'd by fans as an attack page. The radio program and BMJ news item are both 10-years-old. This is old obscure stuff. Colin°Talk 17:33, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- I'm somewhat inclined to agree with DGG about the fraudster; my BLP concern would be linking the fraudster with the psychiatrist with the modest publication record, whose supporters claim discovered the use of valproate and other unlikely achievements. It seems the only evidence we have that they're the same person is (1) the behaviour of his supporters on Wikipedia and (2) it's completely damn obvious, neither of which is really a reliable source for a negative BLP. An article about his career as a fraudster, leaving out the publication record altogether, might be worth a try, though with only two sources from the same journalist it might be vulnerable on notability and possibly neutrality grounds. However, technically that's not under discussion - it would be a completely different article to the deleted ones (all of them), so wouldn't require a DRV. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 18:06, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Comment: Deletion review hardly seems the place for writing about write-ups elsewhere about the subject of the article, but I hope the following will be seen as informative rather than disruptive. The only library to which I have easy access does not have the "top 1000" book. The International Who's Who (71st ed, "2008"; London: Routledge, 2007) does indeed have an article on "Prasad, Ashoka". I'll describe it IFF asked. However, Prasad does not appear in Who'sWho [sic] in the World (aka Marquis Who's Who) 24th ed, 2007; in Who'sWho [sic] in Science and Engineering ("2000-2001 Millennium Edition, i.e. 5th ed.), although this does list Ajay Krishna Prasad (mechanical engineering educator) and Atul Prasad (neurologist); in Notable Scientists from 1900 to the Present (5 vols, Gale, 2001); in the rather oddly titled Encyclopaedia of the World Psychologists (4 vols, Delhi: Global Vision, 2002, a book that, to be fair, has write-ups for fewer than 400); or in the impressively large author index (i.e. index of authors of cited papers) of The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology and Behavioral Science (3rd ed, 4 vols, Wiley, 2001). ¶ I'm drawn to the conclusion that even if Prasad appears in the "top 1000" book (a claim that I'd like to see confirmed by an established, non-SPA editor), this is a mere fluke; and that his appearance in even a very recent The International Who's Who is the result either of (a) a remarkable turnaround in his reputation that I would like to see described in an additional, credible source, or of (b) editorial slackness or credulity (neither of which is unknown within en:WP). -- Hoary (talk) 06:38, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- There seems to have been another incident in Canada in 2005: newspaper report (requires payment), discussion in legislative assembly of Saskatchewan here and here in a more readable page, Saskatchewan Party Caucus press release here. I think the fraudster is probably notable, though I still haven't seen any sources to link him definitively with the alleged discoverer of valproate, who is the subject of the deleted articles, without us having to join the dots ourselves. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 10:16, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Couldn't we join the dots if we did so ever so transparently [pardon the mixed metaphor] and scrupulously? -- Hoary (talk) 12:18, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- By a strict reading of WP:BLP (and given the seriousness of the allegations, I think a strict reading is appropriate) probably not - negative contentious material must be impeccably sourced, so if someone asserts that the two Prasads are not the same, we'd need a good source to show otherwise, even if we had doubts about the motives of the person asserting it. However, it occurs to me that there's actually no pressing need to cover the publication record at all; the only sources we seem to have for the fact that anyone has ever claimed that he was the first to use valproate in mania are some posts to Wikipedia, and a freewebs hosted hagiography [10], so it would not be appropriate to include anyway. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 20:43, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Overturn and Send to AfD As DGG says. there are issues here that would be better dealt with in an AfD. Cheers, Dlohcierekim 14:34, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- At this point, I don't really see that there is anything worth sending back to AfD - as far as I can tell, the most recently deleted content is (barring a bit of cleanup by Hoary) much the same as the poorly sourced, unverifiable material which has already been deleted at two AfDs. A better solution, I think, would be to create a new article which says as much as we can within the limits of WP:V, WP:OR and WP:BLP, and let that be sent to AfD if necessary. I would be happy to collaborate with Hoary, or any other interested parties, on a userspace draft. That would also probably be a better venue for the discussion Hoary and I are starting to get into above. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 20:43, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- With all due respect to those who frequent these pages more than I, the issue at Deletion review is whether the speedy delete was merited. "Recreation of deleted material" is a clear speedy criterion. Hoary and Iain99 have dug up some material on a fraudster with the same name, but none of this information is new: it is covered either on the previous AfDs or on the talk page of the previously deleted article (for which you'd need an admin to recover). Two AfDs have already discussed "the issues here" and they resulted in a clear delete. If folk want to try to cobble together a stub on a fraudster based on a few 10-year-old brief news items, then I agree that someone's sandbox/talk page is a more suitable venue for discussion. Colin°Talk 21:35, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Endorse Deletion - too much confusion and too little evidence to create an article about a living person (or persons?). If someone creates a reliably sourced article in userspace which is based on verifiable information and asserts the notability of the subject, the article can be recreated. Until that point there is nothing to suggest that the consensus established at the AfD should be overturned or needs to be expanded upon at this stage. Note, I am not suggesting that anything that would violate WP:BLP be created in any part of Wikipedia. Guest9999 (talk) 23:48, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Endorse deletion. Colin points out that Two AfDs have already discussed "the issues here" and they resulted in a clear delete. So yes, leave deleted -- and perhaps take measures to prevent re-creation, and think long and hard about the "Top 1000" article. Colin continues: If folk want to try to cobble together a stub on a fraudster based on a few 10-year-old brief news items, then I agree that someone's sandbox/talk page is a more suitable venue for discussion. Well, maybe: but while IaNaL it does seem to me that the allegations against AP might merit his criminal investigation; IFF this happened and resulted in prosecution, then a WP article might be warranted, but unless/until it does, it would indeed be wrong (as well as stupid and dangerous, and in violation of WP policies) to create an article that might be labelled defamatory. -- Hoary (talk) 16:35, 27 January 2008 (UTC) ... Realizing that the thrust of my comment might not have been absolutely unambiguous, I've just added the words "Endorse deletion" to their start. Hoary (talk) 02:59, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Endorse deletion. There's just not enough reliable information to have an article - and that's without even getting into the fraud business. Interesting discussion above, but I suddenly have an image of a WP page that begins This article is about the fraudster. For the psychiatrist, see below. Pinkville (talk) 03:53, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Further research results: I consulted all copies of the Canadian Who's Who from 1987 (when Prasad is alleged to have been a professor at Dalhousie) through 2007 - his name does not appear in any of them. I consulted Who's Who, 2008 (London : A. & C. Black) without finding him, and had the same result in Who's Who in America, 2008. All this (with the evidence above) goes some way to establishing his non-notability (and assuming, for a moment, there are two people, neither of them showed up). I consulted JSTOR and MUSE for any articles by Prasad, with no success. I consulted Google scholar, where I found two articles from the mid-1980s by Ashoka Jahnavi Prasad, this one, and one co-written with a Nirmal Kumar (who may be the same Nirmal Kumar now apparently working in a mental health and brain injury department in Ponoka, Alberta, who knows?). Again, not stirringly notable. Looking at the laudatory article cited above by Iain99, I'm struck by Prasad's itinerant career path, never settling for long in any one university, city or country... an unusual profile for a "highly respected" academic. But, to me, the most striking item in that hagiography is that Dr. Ashoka Jahnavi Prasad Jr. served as Visiting Professor at Weyburn (Canada). (Incidentally, there is no university in Weyburn, though there is the Southeast Regional College, offering 1st and 2nd year university courses in the faculties of Arts, Sciences, Pre-Administration, Fine Arts, Social Work and Education. Not quite where you'd expect an illustrious academic to end up...); but (as we learned in Iain99's links above) Weyburn is exactly the same town where Ashoka Prasad, the fraudster whom we're asked to distinguish from the brilliant academic, was practicing psychiatry when an arrest warrant was issued for him. Are we really to believe that two (unrelated) people with nearly identical names found their way from India to Weyburn, Saskatchewan where they worked in the same field at the same time? It's certainly far more probable that there is one Ashoka (J) Prasad and that he went to Weyburn to practice psychiatry (not as a visiting professor) and to (unsuccesfully) lie low for a bit after being run out of other cities/countries. As for this review, there is no firm information to support an article (whatever citable information exists is very scant); it should remain deleted. Pinkville (talk) 17:57, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Oh, I can't resist pulling apart another example from the laudatory article. Apparently, "Sir Arvid Carlsson who received Nobel Prize in year 2000 said about Dr. Ashok Prasad Jr. that he couldn't have received the honour if Dr. Prasad wouldn't have done the pioneering research and it is a matter to feel pity that he is leading a life of a recluse.". This appears to be confirmed in a letter to The Times of India from Arvid Carlsson (by email, which is great for someone in his eighties). This email/letter says "... You may be aware that the top 1,000 scientists of all time have been voted by 80 universities worldwide and I believe that nine Indians find a mention and two, Hargobind Khorana and Ashoka Johnubiprasad are alive. Khorana would make a good start. You may have difficulty finding Johnubiprasad who has become a recluse now which I think is a pity. I am on record having stated in my post-Nobel prize press conference that had it not been for his pioneering research, I would not have been able to conduct the work that fetched me the Nobel in 2000." This would be the Nobel that Carlsson won for work he did in the late 1950s, when Prasad was about four years old. The NobelPrize site has a full autobiography and interview with Carlsson, who strangely forgot to mention Prasad. This one needs salt. Colin°Talk 18:18, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- ...when Prasad was about four years old. Or possibly 14... Pinkville (talk) 18:27, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- After further reading, I agree with Colin and Pinkville. There's little doubt now that we're talking about a single person. Sorting the truth about this person from the fiction would certainly be a fascinating job for an investigative journalist, but we don't do investigative journalism on Wikipedia. I think that any attempt to write an encyclopaedic article from the handful of fragmentary and contradictory sources we have, without violating WP:V, WP:OR and/or WP:BLP, would fail. Iain99Balderdash and piffle 23:44, 30 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Overturn
I have looked at all the logs and first of all woudl like to say that I support no one!But it appears to me that it would be important to dwell on two issues:
1.whether ther are two different individuals withe the same name
2.if so, whether the person in question is notable enough
I woudl humbly submit that the more I look at the logs the stronger the feeling that while there was always some confusion as to the resolution of this issue,most who voted did so without convincingly ascertaining it-which I submit was sine qua non!Most voted believing we were dealing with one dindividual which I what i think prompted them to vote the way they did!
I shlll deal with the first issue here:
Indians woudl know that while Ashok is a very common name Jahnavi is extremely uncommon!I shall list two Ashok Prasad's bothe medical practitioners here.
[11]
[12]
You would note both are politically connected and while one is controversial the other is not!I happen to remember that Mahabir Prasad's son in law was a medic who was murdered and there was a national outcry!
I have read the International who's who
[13]
entry on Ashok Prasad in my libarary.I woudl like to pont out that my libararay contains the 2005 volume and not the latest and he finds an entry there-therefore he has an antry in teh 20005 issue and maybe the ones before and NOT only in the latest issue where of course he is there
[14]
Hie entry reads that he is teh son of late Judge Jahnavi Prasad.I woudl endorse that teh offending blog should not have found a place as a reference as it contains information that is not in the volume itself!Howvere it does confirm he holds an honorary doctorate from Natal in 2000.And Natal is one of the most respected Universities in South Africa.
I woudl also like to invite everyone to go through the International Who's Who site.It says that entries are posssible only after thorough research by a dedicated team of researchers and are continually under review.The volume has gone through more than 70 editions and is generally regarded the most valuable source of notable living!
While it is possible that there may be editorial lapses there but I woudl sublit it is unlikely-and we do not have any evidence!Besides the volume forward says that teh entries are continually under review!
And it wudl appear unlikely that Top 1000 Scientists ,a book prepared by a noted UK archeologist and a top science historian
[15] (Rochester University website)
and published by a top Asian publishing house
[16] which has published bestsellers like Wings of Fire by President Abdul Kalam (and not an obscure publishing house in India as Colin says)would be prey to the same problems-it is likely but improbable that is what I would say!!
- The author is not the "noted UK archeologist". The Rochester University website has mistaken him for an academic with the same name. According to the publisher (UniverstitiesPress) the author "is a scholar of the history of science and lectures in Nepal, India and Sri Lanka". Other than that short statement, we know nothing about this author, what qualifications he has, and I have been unable to find any other works published by him. That he is a "top science historian" is therefore unverified. The publisher is Universities Press (India) Pvt. Ltd, who are associates of OrientLongman. The book appears to be out-of-print, except in the East. Colin°Talk 09:16, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In short the questions remain unanswered and in teh interest of faor play,I think the deletion should be overturned!I am personally inclined to believe that we are dealing with two different individuals and one of them seems to have b notoriety on his side while other according to reliable sources seems to be notable enough to merit an Honorary doctorate and place in Int.Who's Who for at least lat 3 years.
(Delhite (talk) 06:40, 29 January 2008 (UTC))[reply]
Overturn
I think nobody has been unequivocally convinced that they are not dealing with two different individuals.This needs to be established beyond doubt before voting!
I for one am inclined to agree with Delhite-we are dealing with two different individuals with similar names!I would also feel it is bout time Wikipedia established some gudeline to eliminate the possibility of this confusion.This is not the first time this has happened!
I am not totally satisfied with Hoary's plea that the inclusion in International Who's Who was a result of "fluke" or "editoral lapse".For most,and I include a simple pastgrad like myself in that category,International Who's Who is the first place we refer to in our libraries when we have to look for a notable name!I would not contend that if someone does not find an entry there he/she may not be notable but finding an entry in my view at least would be a measure of notability.
Also,I would find it extremely unlikely that a "fraudster" would have a book published
- I can think of one former Tory politician who has made a career of it :-) Colin°Talk 09:16, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
[17] by CRC Press which we all know is one of the most prestigious science publishers in the world.
- This is a short (200pp) book of which he is the editor, not sole author. Again, this appears to be out of print. Colin°Talk 09:16, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
(Cbhatia (talk) 07:15, 29 January 2008 (UTC))[reply]
overturn-At the present time there can in my view be no ther reasonable vote given that we have not been able to establish the very essential!Are we dealing with one person or two!
Mahabir Prasad's late son in- law and Rajendra Prasad's descendant have similar names-both are doctors-and while teh former,we all remember in India was killed after a career of notoriety sometime ago,the same does not appear to be teh case wit the latter!Also bothe belonged to teh same town-Gorakhpur(as the offennding blog said)!
I am satisfied that entry in International Who's Who and an Honorary Doctorate from Natal are sufficient to merirt notablity unless someone can prove otherwise.
(Venkat Radhakrishnan (talk) 09:51, 29 January 2008 (UTC))[reply]
- Comment: Let's suppose for a moment that there are indeed two people. The clearest expression I've seen anywhere of this notion is in the comment from Delhite above: Ashoka Prasad and Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad are two different individuals [...]. Jahnavi_parasad was born in 1945 not 1955,is teh author of a book and holds an Honoaray degree from Natal [...]. I am now looking at a photocopy of the relevant page (1766) of The International Who's Who 2008. The entry is for "PRASAD, Ashoka." It says he was born on 10 May 1955. So I take it that he's not the person about whom Delhite thinks an article should be written. This being so, where is the information about the different person A J Prasad (b. 1945)? ¶ Oh, no -- hang on a moment. This person has "Publications: five books including Biological Basis and Therapy of Neuroses [...]". And he is "Dr Med hc (Natal)". (Moreover, he's worked in some places whose names sound familiar: Queen Charlotte's Hospital, Dalhousie University, etc.) ¶ So, contrary to what Delhite says, he does rather seem to be the same individual. Now, I could write more about the article-worthiness of this one individual, but I hadn't thought that "deletion review" was the right place for doing so. -- Hoary (talk) 09:53, 29 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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