this post was submitted on 30 Mar 2024
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Amazingly, for someone so eager to give a lesson in linguistics, you managed to ignore literal definitions of the words in question and entirely skip relevant information in my (quite short) reply.
Further, the textbook definition of Stability-
Pay particular attention to "b".
The state of my system is "running". Something changes. If the system doesn't continue to be state "running", the system is unstable BY TEXTBOOK DEFINITION.
That reminds me more of a pendulum. Swing it, and it'll always go back to the original, vertical, position because it develops a restoring moment.
(when disturbed from a condition of equilibrium or steady motion)
.I'm fascinated that someone that started off with this resists using two words instead of one this much. Let's paste in some more definitions:
Cambridge Dictionary:
stability:
Debian is not likely to change, Arch will change constantly. That's why we say Debian is stable, and Arch isn't.
reliability:
You can and have argued that Arch is reliable.
No, I'm not conflating "a" with "b". I'm using stability exactly as it's used in physics.
https://phys.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/College_Physics/College_Physics_1e_(OpenStax)/09%3A_Statics_and_Torque/9.03%3A_Stability
My point is, it's a completely valid use of the word. And yes, so is reliable, though I think "reliable" fails to capture the essence of the system changing but maintaining it's state, hence why we don't study "reliable systems" in physics.
I recommend picking something else to be pedantic about.