From: Kennita Watson (kwatson@netcom.com)
Date: Wed Nov 05 1997 - 19:17:14 MST
Anton Sherwood wrote:
>
> T0Morrow writes
>:...The roots "ex" and "tropy" essentially mean "out of" and "disorder."...
>
> Er, Tom, I think you'll find that _tropy_ means `turning'
Yes, if found out of context. However, as used in the word "entropy",
My American Heritage says "...Greek 'trope' [long e], 'transformation'",
then introduces more complexity in the definition of the Indo-European
word root "trep-", covered in the Appendix.
Transformation and change are fine Extropian concepts -- i.e., "tropy"
is fine, it's entropy we shun. "Entropy" was a coined term to begin
with (Maybe it was a depressed German who decided to use "in change" to
mean basically "running down"). Both "negentropy" and "extropy" place
a Latin prefix on a Greek root (yes, "en-" is also Greek), but so what?
They get the point across.
Kennita
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