User talk:Carlos Eduardo Aramayo B.

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BC vs BCE[edit]

Thank you for your edits but I must bring your attention to Wikipedia:Manual of Style retaining existing styles. If the article uses BC, you must stick with BC. And of course if it uses BCE, stick with BCE. Thanks! Masterhatch (talk) 23:02, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]

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Bmac genetics[edit]

The new 2022 paper on Tajiks doesn’t say anyone is direct descendant of androvono, it actually says some yaninobi are 57 percent androvono and 43 percent bmac, while other Tajiks have east Asia dna as well, Finland is 80 percent sintashta, northeast Europe is closer to steppe mlba, the paper straight up says steppe people are on a Cline from EUROPEAN to EAST ASIAN not central or South Asia, and it also specifically says western steppe and even some central steppe using Androvono as the example, cluster on the bottom of the Europeans Cline, I don’t understand Tajiks obsession with claiming steppe mlba, you conveniently missed the Uzbek Iron Age 2021 study on sogdia which is basically Iron Age bmac, it clearly shows Europeans are closer to Uzbek Iron Age even then Tajiks and Uzbeks even look at supplement files Yogibear1133 (talk) 06:58, 21 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Hi there. I'm afraid you are wrong at History of ancient Israel and Judah in reverting the edit i changed ~ apart from anything else, by virtue of WP:BRD, it would have been best to Discuss the edit after you had been Bold at first then i had Reverted you. Putting that to one side, your edit is incorrect because "would have" is not right in this context: Using that verb structure implies that something did not happen, whereas the statement in the article is that it did ~ according to the bible, the source and subject for that sentence. I agree, if that sentence were talking about what the actual archaeological record shows, "would have" would have been correct; but it's not, so the phrase is incorrect. I'm not trying to be difficult here, but simply trying to explain clearly why those words are not the best, and why i urge you to use the talk page rather than putting them back. If i am not completely clear, please ask, as i am really aiming for the best for the project. I'll point out, for example, that i didn't query any of the other changes you made! Happy days ~ LindsayHello 18:16, 3 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]

@LindsayH: I tried to be the most neutral as possible in the sentence, and I applied the academic criteria that this issue is not resolved. The conditional "would" does not imply necessarily it did not happen, it actually refers to a possibility not resolved, you do not have to feel it as a rejection. On the other hand, the full phrase says: "According to the Hebrew Bible, a United Israelite Monarchy existed as early as the 11th century BCE under the reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon; the country later would have split into two separate kingdoms: Israel (containing the cities of Shechem and Samaria) in the north and Judah (containing Jerusalem and the Jewish Temple) in the south." I see you understand that the full phrase implies the comcept found in the Bible. I see it in a different way: the idea in the Bible ends in the mark (;) after that it comes the current academic consensus that the split is a possibility, but not proven yet. You should have taken into account that articles in Wikipedia are not mere citations of primary sources, many times editors of Wikipedia ask the contributors to quote secondary sources (papers, books, journals). The concept after the mark (;) is the current academic view, the Bible is a primary source, it is not an academic book.--Carlos Eduardo Aramayo B. (talk) 22:47, 3 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]

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