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#134623 10/28/04 04:01 AM
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This special from Nature on the Flores 'hobbit' uses both hominid and hominin to describe it. What is the difference?

http://www.nature.com/news/specials/flores/index.html

edited to make the link clickable. It's been a while, sorry.

Bingley


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#134624 10/28/04 07:49 AM
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TEd
#134625 10/28/04 02:00 PM
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Good find, Ted!
**************************************************
We are dealing with the sciences of systematics and taxonomy. The idea behind these sciences is that they create names that are (1) not confusing, (2) equally and well understood by all scientists that make use of the terms, and (3) provide information about the evolutionary and/or morphological relationships among animals. It sounds like a good set of goals. Unfortunately, we scientists have failed on every single objective. That’s why it’s so tricky and confusing.
!



#134626 10/28/04 02:50 PM
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hominins

man, that sounds like something else...



formerly known as etaoin...
#134627 10/28/04 04:47 PM
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sounds like something else




#134628 10/29/04 12:43 AM
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I never could stand hominy.


#134629 10/29/04 02:16 AM
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Yup. Just be a deer and hand me the read under-ware. (This subject may fall into the other -ware thread, also.)


#134630 10/29/04 04:35 PM
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Aagh--so now we have hardware, software, foodware, and other-ware? Gee, if you're a cow, do you have udder-ware?


#134631 10/30/04 07:38 AM
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What's the difference between software and hardware?

Viagra.



TEd
#134632 10/30/04 01:48 PM
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Don't forget firmware, shareware, and freeware ... There's also warehouse.


#134633 10/30/04 03:06 PM
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I never could stand hominy.

That's why they call 'em "grits", Jackie. Most of us have to grit our teeth to eat 'em.


#134634 10/30/04 04:56 PM
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Viagra

Unless the *other is personally inspiring enough to make one say (As Ralph Cramden would) "Homina homina homina..."


#134635 10/31/04 04:04 AM
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As an old grits-eater, let me share some southern knowledge with you. Maybe more than you need to know!
Hominy is a treated corn product, the kernels (dried, I think but I never made the stuff myself) are soaked in a lye solution to take away the skins, then washed and cooked or dried. The cooked ones may be bought canned and have about three times the size and one fifth the flavor of fresh corn kernels, but are more digestible and supposedly more nutritious.
Grits, a southern staple, may be made from dried corn or dried hominy. Yankees--I mean, northerners--sometimes think they are a breakfast cereal and eat them with milk and sugar. We eat them at breakfast topped with a soft fried egg, or any time with butter or gravy.
Not too different from polenta.


#134636 10/31/04 11:58 AM
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This yankee learned how to eat breakfast grits whilst in the Navy. Fried egg with runny yolk on top and attack with knife and fork in a cross-slash offensive, leaving a puddled mush.

Other times; cheese grits. Yum!

Sometimes I'll eke my oatmeal with grits if the oatmeal is running low and it's gonna be a while till we go shopping, or sometimes just for the change. But no milk and sugar. Eeewww. Nosirree! Butter and peanut butter. That's the ticket.


#134637 10/31/04 11:07 PM
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Mmmmmmmm. Just what we look for in the morning.
Wet, lumpy wall-paper paste with butter and peanut butter. Yummy.


#134638 11/01/04 02:39 PM
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Mmmmmmmm. Just what we look for in the morning.
Wet, lumpy wall-paper paste with butter and peanut butter. Yummy.

********************************************************

Awwright--I think I'll do this now: the only time I have ever gone completely off my rocker in anger over this place is the thread--possibly in our first year, or shortly thereafter--that got longer and longer with recipes. Recipes for banana sandwiches. I still remember (with a shudder) that it was Bingley's Durian thread. I completely lost it (temper-wise). Shades of, "Are we becoming a chat room, now?".
I have been clenching my fists in the sandwich thread (bananas again--what IS it about bananas, anyway??), hoping every day that it would stop. And now we're starting on grits recipes. And it's even my fault, for bringing up hominy. Augh!


#134639 11/01/04 04:34 PM
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And hominy times have I heard you calling for a little more hominy instead of discord?

Which would you rather have: hard core porn or hard pore corn?



TEd
#134640 11/01/04 04:46 PM
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Now, now: let's not have any ad hominy attacks!


#134641 11/01/04 05:20 PM
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I have been clenching my fists in the sandwich thread...

That must've created quite a mess?!

...what IS it about bananas, anyway??),...

C'mere, Jackie, I've got something for you. (monkey-e)


#134642 11/02/04 01:38 AM
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OH...you-ALL! [stamping foot while laughing out loud e]
halfomnipotent, is there a Thai word that combines these two things?


#134643 11/02/04 05:48 AM
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"...bringing up hominy ..."

I guess this would be a bad time to offer to post my posole recipe, eh, Jackie?


#134644 11/02/04 11:19 AM
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And if you want something absolutely yummy to do with your posole, brew you up some menudo. Mmmm-mm. Hominy and tripe!

And a magnificent hangover cure


#134645 11/03/04 01:16 AM
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Jackie, are you really angry? [confused-e]


#134646 11/03/04 02:22 AM
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Well...just worried, I guess, that people might forget altogether about making word posts. Thanks for asking--you're sweet! Much love!

P.S.--I told Hubby and my son what you said about my fa.-in-law's sense of humor; they appreciated hearing that about Dad/Grandpa. Thank you. He was a nice man. And I learned a lot from him about taking whatever comes along, and not getting all hot and bothered. (That's not to say that I don't still have a long way to go, mind you.)

#134647 11/03/04 02:10 PM
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It doesn't help that our Linnaean system was established by, well, Linnaeus. Brilliant though he was, he lived and produced his great work before Darwin developed the theory of evolution. I think I recall he was a special creationist - at that time creation was as good an explanation as any.

We might infer then that he believed species were essentially immutable. This makes for a disconnect between the discrete Linnaean taxonomic system and the continuous nature of species being categorized.

Consider the following:

We start with species 'A' someplace way back in time. Through time, the descendents of this species branch all over the place - into a bush, not a tree. Let's follow one of the myriad paths from this relative 'root' to the currently existing leaf species. Say 'Z' is a modern descendent.

So we have A begat B begat C begat .... Z

Now, if the delta T (the elapsed time) has been a long time (on the order of 100s of thousands or millions of years), then A and Z are probably not the same species - they might not even be the same genus. (Note that A and Z *might* be the same species, because there's nothing I'm aware of in evolutionary theory that says that species have to die out.)

However, in each case, A is the same species as B is the same species as C is the same species as D, and so on. Each successor may or may not be assimilating some slight mutation into the gene pool. Eventually there comes a point where, say, X is no longer of the same species as A, even though A is the same species as W and W is the same species as X.

Let the string '<=>' mean 'is the same species as' and let the string '</=/>' mean 'is not the same species as.'

The upshot of my point is that you can have a case where A <=> B and B <=> C, but A </=/> C. In fact, there must have been many such cases. Mathematically we would say that the relationship 'is the same species as' is not transitive.

(It's important to emphasize that this is a thought experiment. I don't think it's possible to look at a fossil, for example, and say with certainty that it was a direct ancestor species of some existing species. The best we might say is that it appears to be at least a cousin, and 'might' be a direct ancestor. This is part of the reason why terms like "missing link" are nonsensical.)

I'm not sure whether a biologist would buy into any of this, btw. But it seems intuitively obvious.

To summarize:

Cause of Problem:
The objects (species) being categorized constitute a continuum, while the taxonomic system assumes discrete units.

Result:
There will be items among the continuum (species) that are putatively difficult to classify.

k



#134648 11/03/04 03:45 PM
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Wow, Keith, you sound like a math teacher or something. You know what this theory reminds me of? My question about whether a team, when every original player has been replaced, is still the same team though it has the same name. It is, but it isn't.


#134649 11/03/04 04:04 PM
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A <=> B and B <=> C, but A </=/> C.

FF, I'm not sure we can accurately say A <=> B and B <=> C if there is even a slight mutation. I think "closely related to" is more accurate than "is the same as," na?


#134650 11/03/04 04:21 PM
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Jackie, I think hoping that posts remain strictly about words is counterproductive to getting this place back to its former glory. If you remember, no matter how often we strayed into other territories, we always had a heavy core of word-related posts because, let’s face it, we’re all grammar geeks and we love it.

The different threads, and the friendly chatter among friends, made this a place everybody wanted to come to. We couldn’t imagine not coming in to talk to our pals.

The reason this place has become unpleasant is that people are afraid to open up anymore – to have fun. In the past, I never hesitated to say personal things on this site, but I’d never do it now for fear of somebody harping on it ad nauseum, and I’d get hurt.

It’ll take time to bring that original jovial environment back, or to get people comfortable again. I’m not even sure we can do it what with the negative atmosphere created by posts that attack, accuse and constantly harp on members – but damn, I’m trying to do my little bit.

Keeping the posts antiseptically word-related is tremendously dull, and certainly not something I’d look forward to getting to every day – that’s for sure.



#134651 11/03/04 05:16 PM
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"FF, I'm not sure we can accurately say A <=> B and B <=> C if there is even a slight mutation. I think "closely related to" is more accurate than "is the same as," na?"

You might be right, except the relation is not "is the same as," but "is the same species as." If A and B might naturally produce viable offspring, then they are the same species (but, again, the notion of species isn't perfect, imo).

k

p.s. I consider this a word post. It's about the meaning of the word 'species'
and possible limitations. The word was developed before the theory of evolution by a man who believed largely in fixed, discretized populations.

#134652 11/03/04 05:31 PM
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I know; I did say "altogether"... Thank you.


#134653 11/03/04 05:56 PM
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altogether

Oooo, I doubt that we'll forget about word posts, Jackie. Grammar geeks is grammar geeks, it'll always be part of our discussions. Don't you fret about that.

Are you upset? I don't often see a sad face with your posts. I hope you didn't feel I was attacking you in my other post.



#134654 11/03/04 10:17 PM
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Author Sarah Graves says, "...working on ax(squared) + bx +c =0, which if it doesn't equal anything, I frankly don't see much point to..." Math people are *really OK.


#134655 11/04/04 02:22 AM
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Grammar geeks is grammar geeks How true, how true. Thank you, Sweet Thing; I'm okay. Just feeling down today; I think I'm coming down with a cold, plus I have felt sick all day because now we are facing another four years of shame--or possibly worse than shame, I fear. I was just in a sad mood...
P.S.--Thank you for your effort. It does make it much more interesting when we get a glimpse of the real person behind the posts.


#134656 11/09/04 03:45 PM
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Synchronicity.

Completely by accident, I stumbled across the following article at Scientific American: http://makeashorterlink.com/?F20932DB9.

k



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