occam said:
What's the point of a classification other than to draw essential distinctions? The distinction of roundedness isn't scientifically interesting, in and of itself.
You are greatly mistaken. Being naturally round is an rather extraordinary phenominon, no matter how it happens.
occam said:
The proposed definition of "planet" only means "big, orbiting a star, but not a star itself". How is that useful?
Just as useful as calling a star, essentially, "a self-luminous gaseous spheroidal celestial body of great mass which produces energy by means of nuclear fusion reactions"...
Or an animal "any of a kingdom (Animalia) of living things including many-celled organisms and often many of the single-celled ones that typically differ from plants in having cells without cellulose walls, in lacking chlorophyll and the capacity for photosynthesis, in requiring more complex food materials, in being organized to a greater degree of complexity, and in having the capacity for spontaneous movement and rapid motor responses to stimulation".
How are those useful?
You must start with a broad definition, then categorize by type... Rocky dwarfs, Gas giants, Icy dwarfs, etc...
occam said:
No, they don't. Planets are not asteroids, nor comets, nor meteors, nor stars, nor moons. These are all orthogonal categories, that relate to details of formation, composition, etc. That the category of "planets" may also be subcategorized into gas giants and rocky planets doesn't change that.
So what? All these guys are doing are stipulating the rules of the various orthogonal categories and then re-evaluating current know bodies in the solar system, and re-categorizing them. Why is that such a problem?
occam said:
You still need a way to refer to Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune as different from everything else in the Solar System, including Ceres and any large KBOs (including Pluto and Charon).
Why? There's no reason for it.
occam said:
What do you call them, then? "Planets that aren't also asteroids or KBOs or large examples of some other things?" Or do you just call them planets, with the unspoken caveat that you really don't mean to include Ceres?
Likely, people will simply continue calling them the "major planets", though that won't technically be an official classification.
occam said:
The large Jovian moons, and Titan, and Triton and other large moons (including Earth's) formed differently than the planets around which they orbit. It's an important distinction.
Perhaps, but it's not normally a very good way to classify something... Maybe in geology, but certainly not in astronomy, a subject in which it is generally very difficult to determine the origin of any object you are looking at.
Consider stars, for instance... They are primarily classified by what they ARE (size, mass, temperature, spectrum, elemental composition, etc...), not by what they used to be, or by how they came to be.
occam said:
Limiting the discussion to objects in the Solar System*: Planets orbit the Sun. They all orbit within the ecliptic (not counting Pluto), and in the same direction. They all have nearly circular orbits (not counting Pluto). They all have substantial atmospheres (not counting Pluto, or Mercury, which has extenuating circumstances). They all probably formed in a similar manner (possibly not counting Pluto). Taken together, those characteristics help define a useful category of objects (which can be further subcategorized).
Again, so what? There's more than one way to classify any given group of things.
Just because you've only ever eaten red apples, doesn't mean that a green aple isn't an apple.
occam said:
By itself, it doesn't provide any real insight into the processes of formation, so limiting the definition of planethood to this one thing (OK, two things, with the star-orbiting criterion) doesn't further any discussion. You still need to make further distinctions, so what's the point, other than to allow Pluto to retain its legacy status?
So you propose to replace an easily measured and concrete qualification with a something that can, at best, be only theoretically guessed at? Because, the simple fact is, we don't really have a very good idea of how the planets formed, or whether they formed differently from all the other debris floating about the solar system.
And what would you do with the moon, which has an especially unique theory to explain its formation?