|
From: | Federico Leva (Nemo) |
Subject: | Re: [address@hidden: What's GNU -- and what's not] |
Date: | Sun, 9 Feb 2020 01:48:28 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.2.2 |
I'd like to stress a passage which made me think quite a bit:
We have never pressed contributors to endorse the GNU Project philosophy, or any other philosophical views, because people are welcome to contribute to GNU regardless of their views. To change that -- to impose such requirements -- would be radical, gratuitous, and divisive,
What holds the project together is indeed something else. One can debate what qualifies as "views" and whether radical changes are necessary, but personally I appreciate being reminded to be careful about this point.
I've tried to think of analogues outside the usual communities we usually have in mind. In my home town there is a refectory run by Franciscans: I may be mistaken, but if you volunteer there you're not even asked whether you're a Catholic, let alone asked to join functions if you don't want. I understand one may consider that a more menial task, less likely to be influenced by philosophical thoughts than what one might code in their software, but it's just a comparison, not a model.
Federico
[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |