You may already see where I am going with this: It is not exactly true.
The confusion stems from how we use the words "fruit" and "vegetable". First, let me provide the relevant definitions of both.
Fruit:
- The seed-bearing part of a plant, often edible, colorful and fragrant, produced from a floral ovary after fertilization.
- Any sweet, edible part of a plant that resembles seed-bearing fruit, even if it does not develop from a floral ovary; also used in a technically imprecise sense for some sweet or sweetish vegetables, such as rhubarb, that resemble a true fruit or are used in cookery as if they were a fruit.
Vegetable:
So, it depends on the definition. If you use the scientific definitions of both, then all fruits are vegetables. If you use the culinary definitions, then everything is the same as we have known since childhood. If we use the scientific definition for fruit and the culinary definition for vegetable, then we end up with people telling us that tomatoes are a fruit.
It seems what people have done is set up a false choice. the well-known term: "You're either part of the solution or part of the problem." had been turned into: "You're either a fruit or a vegetable.". Except that in either case there can be other choices. You can be neither part of the solution nor the problem; living in the middle of the woods somewhere with zero carbon foot-print. Just as you can be both a fruit(scientific) and a vegetable(culinary); a cucumber that is the fleshy ovary of the plant while also going in a traditional salad.
This fallacy, a form of the false dilemma, is an example of a logically invalid argument that easily creeps into our minds and wrongly convinces us that something makes sense. And these things are hard to kick, too. As far as I know, they are part of our thought-process.
Wikipedia has a comprehensive list of logical fallacies if you would like to see which other ones you may unknowingly commit: List of Fallacies.
- Any plant.
- A plant raised for some edible part of it, such as the leaves, roots, fruit or flowers, but excluding any plant considered to be a fruit, grain, or spice in the culinary sense.
So, it depends on the definition. If you use the scientific definitions of both, then all fruits are vegetables. If you use the culinary definitions, then everything is the same as we have known since childhood. If we use the scientific definition for fruit and the culinary definition for vegetable, then we end up with people telling us that tomatoes are a fruit.
It seems what people have done is set up a false choice. the well-known term: "You're either part of the solution or part of the problem." had been turned into: "You're either a fruit or a vegetable.". Except that in either case there can be other choices. You can be neither part of the solution nor the problem; living in the middle of the woods somewhere with zero carbon foot-print. Just as you can be both a fruit(scientific) and a vegetable(culinary); a cucumber that is the fleshy ovary of the plant while also going in a traditional salad.
This fallacy, a form of the false dilemma, is an example of a logically invalid argument that easily creeps into our minds and wrongly convinces us that something makes sense. And these things are hard to kick, too. As far as I know, they are part of our thought-process.
Wikipedia has a comprehensive list of logical fallacies if you would like to see which other ones you may unknowingly commit: List of Fallacies.