ungelesene_bettlek
Bluelighter
SwampFox56: you should make yourself clear that we're only talking about definitions here. a definition is in fact nothing more than a more-or-less arbitrary convention or abbreviation. it's nothing more than claiming "from now on, I am going to use the short term "a" in order to address the (important, but unhandy) long term "a43sgfsg009253453sdgs...". therefore, a definition can by its very nature never be true or false. the question to ask is: is it useful or not. and when a large maiority of the people working with the terms daily agrees upon the usefullness of a definition, it is more or less set to stone - at least until new findings show that another definition is more useful because of the newly discovered facts. everyone is of corse free to say "I prefer to make my own definitions!", but there rarely comes any good out of it; you always have to explain what you mean, so the sense of the newly coined term gets lost and all you do is creating confusion.
maybe it is also insightful to realise that definitions are often context-dependant. e.g. look up in wikipedia what mathematician mean when talking about "fields" - it's very different from the everyday meaning of that word. and then see how an entire passage of requirements is summed up in that single word. and the same is true for the term "drugs" itself: it can either mean all drugs in the general sense the FDA writes about, or only psychoactive drugs, or only medical drugs, or only illegalized drugs. I always get angry when I hear the phrase "alcohol and drugs", but unfortunately, even most medical doctors use it. btw, the origin of the word "drug" is in "dried plants" (this connection is more obvious in german ("droge" vs "trocknen") and even more in dutch ("drug" vs "drogerende"), and originally, it meant just that.
to get to the point: you can always water down definitions like you try to do buy making them more "general". if you extend your path just a little bit, you soon come to a point where every substance is a drug, because it interacts with the human body somehow (including black holes, the higgs boson and dark energy). then the very reason to make a definition got lost, because now "drug" is just a synonym for "substance". another good example are the opposites "artificial" and "natural" (not only in drug-related context). often people argue like "humankind is a part of nature, and therefor also all man-made things are part of nature". consequence: everything is natural, nothing is artificial, so both terms have lost their meaning and could be thrown away.
maybe it is also insightful to realise that definitions are often context-dependant. e.g. look up in wikipedia what mathematician mean when talking about "fields" - it's very different from the everyday meaning of that word. and then see how an entire passage of requirements is summed up in that single word. and the same is true for the term "drugs" itself: it can either mean all drugs in the general sense the FDA writes about, or only psychoactive drugs, or only medical drugs, or only illegalized drugs. I always get angry when I hear the phrase "alcohol and drugs", but unfortunately, even most medical doctors use it. btw, the origin of the word "drug" is in "dried plants" (this connection is more obvious in german ("droge" vs "trocknen") and even more in dutch ("drug" vs "drogerende"), and originally, it meant just that.
to get to the point: you can always water down definitions like you try to do buy making them more "general". if you extend your path just a little bit, you soon come to a point where every substance is a drug, because it interacts with the human body somehow (including black holes, the higgs boson and dark energy). then the very reason to make a definition got lost, because now "drug" is just a synonym for "substance". another good example are the opposites "artificial" and "natural" (not only in drug-related context). often people argue like "humankind is a part of nature, and therefor also all man-made things are part of nature". consequence: everything is natural, nothing is artificial, so both terms have lost their meaning and could be thrown away.
