I didn't make your point for you at all. You said:
And that was wrong. Trying to suddenly acknowledge that "there could conceivably be specific exceptions" is clearly back-peddling on your part after you went out of your way to claim my logic didn't hold a "milliliter of water."
Is that air-tight? No, but it's logical.
Originally Posted by Empirate
Bottom line: "all poisons" means friggin' ALL poisons. Period.
And that was wrong. Trying to suddenly acknowledge that "there could conceivably be specific exceptions" is clearly back-peddling on your part after you went out of your way to claim my logic didn't hold a "milliliter of water."
It's not ex negativo. It's construction. The use of the language in one part of the document can give meaning to the use in another part of the document when the meaning is ambiguous. "All diseases" does not include magical or supernatural diseases. If it did, there would be no need to explicitly include them. Ergo, "all poisons" does not automatically include magical and supernatural poisons, and given that RAW says poisons are Extraordinary, it most likely does NOT include magical and supernatural.I repeat that a proof ex negativo doesn't prove anything.
Is that air-tight? No, but it's logical.