keesan
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Definition of consume/consumer
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Mar 24 21:27 UTC 1998 |
What is your definition of consumer, to consume, consumption? Can you consume
a service, as in 'mental health consumers', a phrase which sounds odd to me?
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keesan
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response 1 of 4:
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Mar 24 21:33 UTC 1998 |
My 1961 Webster's, which defines the state of the language when I was
acquiring it, says: consume - 1) to do away with completely, destroy; 2) to
spend wastefully, squander, use up, expend; 3) to eat or drink up, esp. in
great quantity; 4) to engage fully (consumed by anxiety?).
consumer - one that consumes; specif., one that utilizes economic goods.
SO it is possible to consume your health, but in 1961 you would not go to a
doctor for the purpose. (You could take up smoking.)
I think the meaning has changed from a negative to a neutral one since 1961.
YOu can't be a wise glutton, or a wise squanderer.
Is there some way to be a wise consumer without destroying, wasting,
squandering, or using up our resource base?
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kentn
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response 4 of 4:
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Mar 26 03:14 UTC 1998 |
I like the "to use up" definition of "to consume". In terms of health
care, one might consider that, for example, a doctor can only see X
patients in her career, so every visit is in a sense using up a resource
of the community (1/X, or more if you add up all the visits you make
during that doctor's career). This relates to the concept of "time is
money" or valuable, other words. Time being a finite resource for us
humans, one way to consume it is wisely (however you define *that*).
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