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Is there a reason to group these three together? There doesn't seem to be a logical link between them (historians and classicists, OK, but writers?). Fram (talk) 08:10, 28 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Good question. My original plan was to have five groups: Science, Literature, Government, Society and Intellectuals. This page is the Literature group - people who produce narratives to explain our history, our culture and use their imagination to tell stories. "writers" is a very general term but also so would be the term "storytellers" which is nearer to the purpose of this grouping. Arguably, "literary scholars" and "poets" could also be in the Literature group but they overlap with the remaining groups, so the decision can be deferred. The remaining groups have large collections in each of Philosophy, Politics and Economics so it becomes logical (in the sense that they are taught together at Oxford) to group them as PPE, in which the "original plan" would be superseded.
Jesus College, Oxford (or to be more precise, the wiki editor) has done an excellent job of categorising its alumni into 18 categories. In addition, there are three pages with more names for 1) politicians, lawyers, civil servants; 2) clergy 3) mathematics, medicine and science. Other Colleges are following suit e.g. University College, Oxford. Jesus has not attempted to combine the literary activities which points up the logical difficulties in doing so. JPF (talk) 13:55, 28 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]