My children can buy a new MP3 "album" from iTunes.
If they missed something on TV, they can pause the DVR and "rewind."

The words may eventually be elimanated, but the next generation is adopting 
them without care of origin.

Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2011 13:43:05 -0500
Subject: Re: [Vo]:LENR and Cold Fusion from a critical logical point of view.
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Peter Heckert <[email protected]> wrote: 
Arent there better words?

I have addressed this question here before, from the point of view of 
linguistics. It does not matter what you call something. People will know what 
you mean. See Wittgenstein's discussion of meaning: "Don’t ask for the meaning, 
ask for the use." This is the basis for Google's translation tools, which work 
better than most linguists predicted was possible. See:

http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2011/10/google_translate_will_google_s_computers_understand_languages_be.html

Terminology is often inaccurate and usually a generation behind. We often pick 
a word for something new that describes the older object better than the new 
one. Because there isn't a word for the new thing. For example:

A collection of files in a computer is called a folder, even though it does not 
fold. It is represented by a manila folder icon, even though many people have 
never seen an actual folder. My daughter visited my office years ago, saw a 
folder, and said, "ah, so that's what the thing on the screen is."

Ae call a semiconductor replacement for a hard disk a "solid state disk" even 
though:
It isn't disk shaped.
A hard disk is in the solid state too.

In fission reactors, they talk about "burning" the fuel, even though combustion 
does not occur. That does not matter. No one is confused by the term, any more 
than they are by the expression "burn rate" to describe the use of start-up 
funds in venture capital. No one thinks the people starting a company are 
actually igniting piles of cash money . . . although I suppose they might have 
at the height of the dot-com boom.

In scientific disciplines, terminology is more likely to be adjusted to reflect 
underlying physical reality than in other disciplines. But it often starts out 
wrong, or drifts into being wrong as new discoveries are made or technology 
changes, yet it remains in use.

- Jed

                                          

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