[YG Conlang Archives] > [engelang group] > messages [Date Index] [Thread Index] >
John E. Clifford scripsit: > While there may or may not be one and only one John Clifford, there > clearly is not only one cat. Well, that depends on the specifics of your ontology. The ancient Egyptians, who were by no means primitives, apparently really did think that a new sun was born every morning in the eastern desert, crossed the sky, and died in the western desert (wherefore the latter was the land of the dead for them). If you had told them there was only one Sun, they would have thought that was ludicrous: obviously each sun is ontologically distinct! There is a group of 47,000 quaking aspens in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah that have been shown to be a single organism: the root systems are interconnected and the trees are genetically identical. From the mass point of view, Pando (< Latin _pando_ 'I spread') is at least 80,000 years old and perhaps a million; it weighs about 6000 metric tons. Myopically singularized, it's just one tree of perfectly ordinary size and lifespan. -- What has four pairs of pants, lives John Cowan in Philadelphia, and it never rains http://www.ccil.org/~cowan but it pours? cowan@hidden.email --Rufus T. Firefly