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With that in mind, let me try a different approach. If Cardiocrinum is monotypic, please explain to me why Tulipa is not.
the reference to Carlton (which I also saw some years ago) is beside the point. It is also a doubtful statement - something that every identical twin would tell you.
A word can certainly be used in the wrong way but if a majority of specialists in a field use it in one way this is the meaning of the word in that field. I have seen - and quoted - examples that say that Cardiocrinum is monocarp. Some literature give Agave americana as a typical monocarp species.I have seen nobody except Jim who claims otherwise. Excuse me Jim but what is your authority to say that the authors of these publications are wrong?
If there is agreement on the meaning of the term 'Monocarpic' then the question of whether a plant is or is not monocarpic is a purely empirical question; logic is neither here nor there.
Why are you introducing this hypothetical world in which there is agreement on the meaning of the term "monocarpic"? There is no such agreement. That is part of the problem. If one authority gives as the meaning of monocarpic what happens in Echium, and another authority gives as its meaning what happens in Cardiocrinum,
If there is agreement on the meaning of the term 'Monocarpic' then the question of whether a plant is or is not monocarpic is a purely empirical question;
.............. oh God, life's too short!