After the discussion regarding
infinity, my views on the matter had started to change. So I let these new ideas ruminate in my mind for a few days, and then decided to do some reading.
I began with the dictionary. I looked up "
universe" on Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary...nothing too compelling. Next I looked up "
space" and was somewhat interested to find that the definition for the word as referring to
outer space was only the fifth definition listed. I decided to investigate further by referencing another dictionary - in doing so I happened upon a startling find.
The dictionary I used is one we've had in our house for years, and one my family has always used most conclusively. The volume is missing all its cover and introductory pages, so that the "cover" is the first page of the letter "A" - by the looks of it, it is a rather old edition. For the most part, its definitions for "space" were quite similar to Merriam-Webster's Online definitions - starting with similar definitions for the word in terms of time, space as defined by three or more points, a musical staff, etc. with the definition referring to "outer space" being the fourth entry instead of Merriam-Webster's fifth. However, compare the difference in defintions:
Merriam-Webster's:
5 : the region beyond the earth's atmosphere or beyond the solar system
our family dictionary:
4 : the region currently beyond human thought - constantly in flux as defintion depends on current state of humanity
Stunned, I hunted for the word in as many dictionaries as I could get my hands on. But to no avail. None had entries remotely as mysterious. I was baffled.
Deep in though, I decided it must be some sort of prank - an alteration made during the last step of printing by a linguistic trickster. But who was this person? And what dictionary
did I hold in my hands in the first place? With it's cover pages long lost, there was no way to tell. This dictionary that I had blindly trusted for so long.
And yet...the defintion seemed so truthful. Somehow so much more complete than "the region beyond the earth's atmosphere or beyond the solar system." After days of thought, I came up with an answer to my questions.
My anomalous and inexplicable dictionary with its equally anomalous trickster author had in an instant shattered years of faith. Faith in the authority of this book called "dictionary." Faith in the authority of objectivity. My linguistic trickster had revealed to me the subjectivity of one of our most base methods of understanding our world - language. The answer to my questions was that none of them mattered. It didn't matter who the prankster was, and what dictionary I held in my hands. It, like any other diciontary, was no more or less authoritative than any other dictionary or book or thought.
Words change meaning and
mean differently for everyone. Why allow a group of people to define them definitively? For example, Merriam-Webster's four definitions for "
oil" do not feel complete in today's world. A possible new, fifth definition to be included:
oil
noun
[...]
5 : a soon to be outdated fuel source
So, a project proposal:
We hear often of people trying to get words into the established dictionaries. There is a long set of criteria a word must pass before it is included - this seems like the wrong way of going about it. Let's pull the rug out from under language.
Let's create our own dictionary. New words and new understandings of old words. Let's compile as many as we can as thoroughly as we can. Once we have enough, we'll get it published and put on the reference shelves of bookstores as well as on our own official, ever-updated online dictionary. Anyone can contribute as frequently as they like. We'll discuss each word and definition(s) proposed and then make it "official."
Suggestions for words to re-define:
oil, zero, one, is
And a group of new words:
space-col·lect
verb
1. to engage in post-ideological, non-partisan, forward thinking activities or discussions: He tried to space-collect his way out of the mindless political argument.
2. to publish an entry on the Space Collective website: Did you space-collect today?
space-collected — space-collecting
space-col·lec·tion
noun
1. a published entry on a Space Collective website page: I loved your space-collection on generative art.
2. a post-ideological, non-partisan, forward thinking act or statement: Her space-collection changed everyone's mind.
space-col·lec·tor
noun
one who engages in space-collecting
space-col·lect·ed
adj
displaying post-ideological, non-partisan, forward thinking properties: That is so space-collected.
Here's to the spirit of our trickster linguist.
Takers?