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quote:Incorrect? How can a definition be incorrect – it is whatever we choose it to be. We may choose to change a definition, but that does not make either the new or the old definition incorrect per se.
quote:Originally posted by DoctorBeaverA definition can be incorrect if it is based on incomplete knowledge. Someone in rural England in the middle ages may have defined a human being as looking very much like himself. He would quite probably have included his own skin colour. His definition would therefore have been based on an incorrect assumption; i.e. that all humans are the same colour.Definitions must change if an increase in pertinent knowledge shows them to be wrong.
quote:Ofcourse, definitions are created to support the contemporary knowledge base, and as knowledge changes, so does the meaning of words. On another thread, we are discussing viruses, and assume some knowledge of what a virus is, but that knowledge is very different to the knowledge that someone in ancient Rome would have known about disease, and thus we have interpreted the word virus to have a meaning totally alien to the meaning the ancient Romans would have used it for. Does this mean that there definition for the word virus was incorrect?
quote:Originally posted by DoctorBeaverI'm not sure what "virus" was supposed to mean to a Roman so I can't really comment on that. It's quite possible that the word was adopted for what we now call a virus because a word was needed whose existing definition meant something similar. Taking an existing word and applying it to something new does not change its original definition. Take the word "gay". It still means "happy" as well as "homosexual"; its original definition has not changed, another definition has been added.I think that is a very different thing to sticking rigidly to a definition when contemporary knowledge shows that definition to be incomplete or incorrect.
quote:Originally posted by wolramIn my view life, must mean, (some thing) able to reproduce and evolve, inteligent life is quitedifferent, how do (we) define intelligent, on another world some thing akin to a tree stump could be pondering if humans are alive.A born optomist
quote:has one or two extra ingredients that afford it sentience
quote:Originally posted by neilepFire.It's birth is a spark. It grows, it spreads, it has offspring and dies, but it's clearly not alive.
quote:But, there may be life out there which resembles fire but has one or two extra ingredients that afford it sentience. Should we discover it then we would have no choice but to deem it alive, despite it not meeting our criteria for our definition of life.
quote:Originally posted by neilep...however, I would say fire does make offspring...sparks from it produce new flames and hence offspring.
quote:Someone who can no longer produce children is still clearly alive and therefore does indeed subscribe to perhaps an alternate definition for the word life, be it through a sterilization process or just plain old age.................
quote:Originally posted by wolramMay be one can not adjudge an unknown individual as alive, if we can notcommunicate with it, it shows no sign of reproduction, and does notconsume food , It would have to be a community of (aliens)we study, if they did none of the above it would be difficult tocall them alive.
quote:Originally posted by wolramb) It must be the product of imperfect reproduction. The nature of the imperfections must be themselves inheritable, and relevant to the ability of the organism to survive. This logically leads to a need for a clearly defined parent child relationship (this would exclude fire).I am not sure about this, there may be a way to (clone) that is naturalto some alien life form, not very good for enviromental adaptation, butif said enviroment is stable over large time scales evolution may beun neccesary.A born optomist