It starts with...
> MIT says these are history's most important people. Wikipedia says the internet disagrees.
Importance of the sort it is _eventually_ clearly talking about and attention are not the same thing.
> This peer-reviewed metric synthesizes Wikipedia presence across 25+ languages, article length, and sustained view counts over time to measure lasting global influence.
Influence of the sort it is _eventually_ clearly talking about and attention are not the same thing.
> Some of history's most consequential figures are practically invisible online
Wikipedia traffic and invisibility are not the same thing. Wikipedia and online are not the same thing.
It then continues though...
> Not because they don't matter, but because pop culture has moved on.
> Note how modern political figures dominate attention while foundational thinkers fade
> The gap reveals something uncomfortable: we've built an internet that amplifies controversy over wisdom.
Yeah, ok. This is what they should lead with. It's an important message. And they should drop the false equivalences.
HPI measures the global archival presence of a figure, while pageviews measure current search frequency. These quantify different variables that lack a direct logical relationship.