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[edit] Oh come onThis article could really use a complete rewrite. We have barely any (if any) mention of a father's relationship with his children and developmental consequences thereof (except as an "authority figure"), society's expectation of fathers, responsibilaties of fathers in different cultures, etc. etc. What we do have in the third paragraph: "According to Deleuze, the father authority exercises repression over sexual desire." This is just embarassing. Then halfway through the article the Christians get their turn to make it even more confusing. This could be the worst wikipedia entry I've seen yet. Would someone rewrite this?
Add your academic sources to the article, if you have any.--SummerWithMorons (talk) 20:24, 13 May 2008 (UTC)
The article scope is that of scholar literature, not the editors personal opinions. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 88.44.97.210 (talk) 08:56, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Religious titleI think there's a few other religious denominations that refer to male priests as Father besides Roman Catholics and the Orthodox churches, but I am not 100% sure which ones they are. If anyone else knows what other religions use that title with their priests please feel free to add that. JesseG 04:23, 14 May 2004 (UTC)
[edit] "Surprise father"Is that a real established term? [1] Google has only 600 hits, and most aren't even related to it, as defined in this article. --Menchi 07:19, 18 Aug 2004 (UTC)
[edit] BanketiWhere does that term for father come from? I lived in Germany for two years and speak German fluently. I have never heard anyone use "banketi" in reference to his or her father.
[edit] Relationship between father and sonThis was added to the article: Especially in today's "politically correct" world, parental roles towards "mothering" and "fathering" have become less rigid and more "flexible." Otherwords, typical mothering roles can be taken on by the father, and fathering roles by the mother. But regardless of social context, the father possesses a unique relationship with his children: To sever the child's bond of maternal dependence, and lead the child into the world with responsibility and confidence. In my opinion, this is more of an opinion than an encyclopedic sentence. I have removed it, but we may discuss here the convenience to keep it. What is more, there is the article Paternal bond which talks about this topic. John C PI 22:46, 19 January 2007 (UTC) [edit] Split out the Christianity section?The section on Christianity seems out of place in this article. For the use with God there's already God the Father. For use with priests it seems more relevant in a article on clergy or priestly nomenclature, if there is one. At any rate, the use of 'father' for biological father vs. a respectful title seem different enough to be in separate articles. How do other people feel? Tocharianne 01:32, 13 July 2007 (UTC) just wondering if some peeps might have an issue with calling religions "cults"? i'm atheist, but i'm just wondering Shakespeare Monkey 11:13, 23 August 2007 (UTC) Certainly the section is a problem if it remains focused on christianity only. On the term "cult", that is the neutral anthropological term, while "religion" and "myth" have racist connotations.--SummerWithMorons 11:31, 23 August 2007 (UTC) Far be it from me to claim knowledge about anthropological terms, but I've never heard a religion referred to as a 'cult', at least not by a source without an axe to grind. On the other hand, I've yet to encounter a negative connotation of the term 'religion' in mainstream circles. I, like Hellznrg, am an atheist, but the heading struck even me as being rather... inflammatory. 64.38.189.183 00:11, 24 August 2007 (UTC) [edit] Merge with Non-human fatherhoodThere was also a suggestion to merge non-human fatherhood here on that talk page. Tocharianne 01:32, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Defined as male parentThe current revision says, "A father is defined as the male parent of an offspring.[citation needed]" The issue needing a citation should be clarified. It is clear that a male parent of an offspring is a father. What is not clear, without considerable source citations, is that only male parents of offspring can fit the definition of "father". What reliable sources state that one of two women raising a child cannot be, by some definition, the "father" of that child? (sdsds - talk) 00:17, 21 October 2007 (UTC)
There can even be more than one biological father, for that matter. Just what this has to do with the first sentence of the article is beyond me. Lars T. 23:03, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Request a linkThe Tufts University Child and Family WebGuide is a good resource on fathers. http://www.cfw.tufts.edu/topic/2/36.htm The WebGuide is a directory that evaluates, describes and provides links to hundreds of sites containing child development research and practical advice. The WebGuide, a not-for-profit resource, was based on parent and professional feedback, as well as support from such noted child development experts as David Elkind, Edward Zigler, and the late Fred Rogers. Topics cover all ages, from early child development through adolescence. The WebGuide selects sites that have the highest quality child development research and that are parent friendly. The fathers page of this site offers a wide variety of information about fathers and resources for fathers. Extensive research-based articles on issues surrounding fatherhood are presented, looking at absent fathers and father involvement issues, non-custodial and custodial single fathers, father-related policy issues, and more. The sites listed here offer substantial practical advice as well, on topics including responsible fathering, co-parenting, and healthy father involvement. Teamme 16:17, 23 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] What?This is perhaps the worst written article on this site--underdeveloped, poor transitions, horrible intro, etc. I agree with the "Oh come on" comment--needs complete rewrite. Could someone do so? I would but I'm afraid I'll screw it up even worse. [edit] What?This is perhaps the worst written article on this site--underdeveloped, poor transitions, horrible intro, etc. I agree with the "Oh come on" comment--needs complete rewrite. Could someone do so? I would but I'm afraid I'll screw it up even worse. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.146.70.240 (talk) 02:57, 24 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] PicturesThis is atrocious. Why on earth are there 3 images that look like they are from family albums. They are very amature. Also, it is a little disturbing that they are all white. There is no need for this. I'm going to be bold and remove 2, and re-arrange to put the most professional looking image at the top. I'd gladly discuss this further and wouldn't mind if someone who disagrees with me reverts, but since there hasn't been discussion here since October, I'll try being bold now.-Andrew c [talk] 21:02, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Section about Madonna and her fatherPop singer Madonna often deals with the theme of the father in her work, for example the song "Oh Father" and "Papa Don't Preach", and on the American Life album she sings a song called "Mother and Father" which contains the lines: "My father had to go to work/ I used to think he was a jerk." And in an episode of Family Guy, a show fittingly about the importance of fathers, the father, Peter Griffin, discusses Madonna with his own father, saying, "With Madonna, it's all just about getting back at daddy." So, I think this article would be much improved to include a section about the importance of Madonna's relationship with her father Silvio Ciccone, and perhaps her relationship with brother Christopher Ciccone who has commented on the importance the father plays in Madonna's work. Thank you. -- Copy Editor (talk) 07:12, 1 September 2008 (UTC) [edit] Why does this page suck so much?Who on earth wrote this? I mean its sucks so much, I didn't think something could write something so shitty. The writing is tedious and it meanders in content slowly drowning in its own shit while managing to sound seiously sexist at the same time. Some one needs to redo the whole thing its just that bad.
[edit] Baby DaddyWhy does Wikipedia want to cover up the phenomenon of the "baby daddy" by redirecting that topic to "fatherhood," which ignores the subject of baby daddies? This is an important sociological concept for the urban United States. Pockets of culture exist wherein the binary mother-father family, traditional in Judeo-Christian society, often gives way to a web of relationships; one mother could have several children by different fathers, each of whom could have several children by a different mother. Maybe we could have a separate section on fatherhood in the U.S. and explore the topic in moderate detail? 68.41.0.231 (talk) 05:47, 2 October 2008 (UTC) == [edit] Non-human fatherhood made a different entryI am making research about horseracing and I stumbled across the word "sire", meaning a stallion whose offspring also races. I wanted to investigate further, but "sire" redirected me to this poor "father" entry. I believe that non-human fatherhood should have its own entry and fully agree with the previous comentaries about how this "father" entry should be totally rewritten.
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