Dragaera

Below Hypothesis

Kenneth Gorelick pulmon at comcast.net
Mon Nov 10 03:56:24 PST 2003

In medicine  we often use the suffix "genic" to mean "arising from" 
although it actually means "giving birth to". So Rectogenic would be a 
good term, alternative, anogenic, sigmoidogenic or colonogenic, 
depending on how far up the idea was pulled from...
On Nov 10, 2003, at 2:56 AM, David Silberstein wrote:

> On Sun, 9 Nov 2003, Philip Hart wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 9 Nov 2003, David Silberstein wrote:
>>
>>> On Sun, 9 Nov 2003, Philip Hart wrote:
>>>
>>>> (what's below hypothesis?)
>>>
>>> Suggestion?
>>> Notion?
>>> Idea?
>>> Pulled-from-out-of-arse wild speculation?
>>
>> I'm looking for some philosophy-of-science-blessed term, if possible
>> with a Greek root....
>
> "Idea" is Greek.  How about "ideation"?  More to the point,
> "*pararectal* ideation"?  OK, so "rectum" is latin, but "para" is
> definitely Greek.
>
> [tangent]
>
> I have the notion that "pararectal" ought to be prefixed before
> all examples of science and technology as portrayed in the movies and
> television.  So, for example, Lara Croft is pararectal archeologist.
>
> The more the science/tech deviates from reality, or from sane
> speculation, the more prefixes we add to the term, to indicate that it
> came from further up the descending colon.  So while, say, Trek's
> "warp drive" is merely pararectal, the way the universal translator
> *immediately* recognizes languages is hyperpararectal technology, and
> the bogon-particle-du-jour is superhyperpararectal particle physics.
>
> [/tangent]
>