How does a verb prone into another verbing?
(Individuation of processes maybe?)
Just playing about. — fdrake
How do we handle nouns like 'human' that do many qualitatively different things? — Kenosha Kid
I don’t understand. — Pfhorrest
This is because of the principle of "to be is to do" / "to do is to be": things are what they do, every property of a thing is a propensity for it to behave in some way in response to something being done to it. — Pfhorrest
rom the noun “a human“ we could back-form a verb “to human”, which means to do those things definitive of a human — Pfhorrest
In a looser sense, someone doing something contextually associated with humans, like "to err" or whatever, could also be another sense of "to human". E.g. from the perspective of some inerrant angels or something, "way to human it up" could be a cromulent way to say "you erred". — Pfhorrest
A human is, as you say, a bundle of properties, of prone-nesses, each of which already have corresponding verbs. — Kenosha Kid
I’m not suggesting that we replace all of those verbs with context-dependent versions of “to human” — Pfhorrest
my broader proposal that there would be a verb “to human” implied by the form of the noun we would use in place of our noun “human”, e.g. “humaner”, where “to human” just means “to be humany” or “to do as humaner does” — Pfhorrest
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