Michael Brady catches me here where, despite all my own preachments, I use 
a potentially misleading word and fail to describe what I have in mind with 
it.   The word is 'weightless'. I wrote:

> Here's a fact about "thought": it is not
> stable; in a respectable mind, it starts as something weightless and, as 
the
> thinker reflects, the thought is tested and advanced, it takes on 
density,
> heft, and richness.

But Michael is wrong to poke fun at me by attributing to me a notion of 
'weightless' I did not have. He tells me what "I mean":

"You mean, thoughts begin as no thing ("weightless") and grow in mass
("density," "heft") and actual value? Whoa. Didn't know that."

In fact the notion I had in mind with 'weightless' was one of 
"light-weight", "trifling", inconsiderable. With almost every interesting word 
I 
encountered in philosophy   -- like 'cause', 'meaning', 'belief' -- my initial 
notions in Philosophy 101 were all those inconsiderable things. And I suspect 
Michael knew I did not think of 'weightless' as "no thing". So I cannot take 
him seriously here. 

In sum, I think Michael's objection to my use of 'weightless' is 
weightless. 

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