FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
Curious bystabdard here. I thought legalese was written in such ways not because a list was exhaustive or Inexhaustive but in order to remove any possible ambiguousness?
Look, I told you I didn't want to get drawn into this. This is why. If you make a sweeping, unarguably wrong point, the best course of action is to just concede it. You can concede it with grace, you can concede it with humor, or you just go, "Yep, my bad," (that might be the best way!) and you move on.
There was no debate here. The statement that there is no general principle in statutory English that lists and descriptions are exhaustive is not just incorrect, it's the opposite of true. The general principle that I just listed is not just a general principle, it's probably the very first principle (or one of them, at least) taught in every single class on statutory construction, legislative purpose, and even basic contract law. It's not even a general principle- it's one of the most basic principles. It is a principle so basic that most of the people get the gist without knowing the Latin. So basic that most people intuitively understand what a residual clause is ("or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another" is an example of a residual clause that gets a lot of legal action) before they understand the technical meaning. For that matter, most people intuit why the phrase "included, but not limited to," is standard legal-ese.
Now, allowances can always be made for people that misspeak. I do it all the time! Of course, if called on it, I need to correct myself. Now, as a general rule, there are good ways to do this, and bad ways. Allow me to illustrate how I would have handled it-
"Well, of course that's correct, and I shouldn't have written that. Thanks for the correction- I got carried away when I was writing about natural language. That said, I personally subscribe to Karl Llewellyn's duelling can[n]ons!"
See! There, you are able to (1) concede a lost point, (2) inject a little levity, and (3) signal to anyone who cares that you actually know what you're talking about by both incorporation through reference and knowing wordplay.
However, when you attempt to (poorly) shift the terms of the debate to an area that you believe you are familiar with, it ends up only (1) betraying your lack of familiarity with the overall subject matter, and (2) showing that you aren't interested in any of the matter being discussed, but only in "winning," - which is a strange thing, indeed, since this is a forum dedicated to, you know, D&D.
So, I could continue, but what's the point? I tried this twice before - you have your views, and you are welcome to them. I would say that for people that understand what's going on, your attempts to try to "overawe" people to your point of view are not well taken, and I will remind you again of the following question from Kagan, J., "Did your office ever consider just confessing error in this case?"
Anyway, I wish you the best of luck convincing other people that your ideas that are not in the RAW are, in fact, the RAW, and I wish @Maxperson the best of luck at convincing other people that his idiosyncratic definition of houserule is correct.