Oh, semantics. I've heard some of you guys on here talk about that before, and I've looked into it, but not much.It's not subjective, it's semantic.
Here are some definitions I found:
se·man·tic
/səˈman(t)ik/
adjective
adjective: semantic
relating to meaning in language or logic.
Meaning relating to interpretation of words? Isn't interpretation subjective also?1.Semantic is defined as the meaning or interpretation of a word or sentence.
Unless it actually means something else?
Oh, ok, I guess it *technically* isn't painful.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain
Waterboarding is not painful, in the proper sense. It's neither damaging, or potentially damaging to tissues. It's a state of panic induced by a drowning reflex.
Wait what? I thought things had to be damaging to be painful?As to pain, no, it depends on the temperature and other conditions of the nerves. There's something called the pain threshold, where a sensory stimuli crosses from uncomfortable into painful; it's the point where your nerves tell your brain your tissue is being damaged (correctly or incorrectly). Temperatures that are low but not too low, or lowered gradually enough, may never lead to the pain threshold being crossed (although warming back up can be extremely painful even though it's not damaging).
Or, you can write it.You have to paste it for every quote, individually.
Anyway, I know. I just didn't feel like doing it for all of them, because I was only responding to one person, and not referencing anything. But I still wanted to show ya I could do it now.