There's a group of people out there who believe that there is another you who made that exact post to another me out there in the universe. Not only that, but that there are an infinitely many of them (the nearest clocks in at 10^(10^29) meters distant). http://blogs.wnyc.org/radiolab/2008/08/12/the-multi-universes/
Also, I never said anything about breathing fire or on Earth.
Yes, exactly. And if you're proposing that dragons exist because "somewhere out there" they may exist in
our universe, you're wrong. Dragons are a Terran concept; they're creatures invented by people that consolidated Earthly notions such as teeth, scales, wings, eyes, nostrils and the reptile. All of these are unique to Earth. Despite the fact that we've become inundated with sci-fi renditions of extraterrestrial life for generations, it's actually ludicrous to think that, after sending someone out to seek out alien life, they'd come back with, "They look like reptilians / insectoids / little green people!" They wouldn't. The concepts of mammals, insects, reptiles, etc. are void in regards to alien life and it would take the wildest of human imagination to even begin hypothesizing what it
may "look like" in any realistic sense. Even if someone hit a reset button on Earth's history and life began anew from the same biochemistry and environmental conditions, we, nor anything that's ever been here, would somehow come around again. Hence, the notion of dragons somewhere in the universe is silly to consider, but in all of the
multiverse is suddenly made (slightly) more probable: a series of universes parallel to ours had to have formed in relatively the same way due to the law of entropy, but with slight variations (which eventually lead to significant differences -- if the big bang lasted two hundred trillionths of a second more, for instance, the gravity, electromagnetism and the nuclear forces we hold dear and govern every facet of our world would be... quite different). This doesn't necessarily mean there's a "second/third/fouth me" sitting here typing right now in
any universe but this one, but it could entail there being another Earth, which
might have bilateral animals such as mammals or reptiles, one of which
might be whatever it is you constitute a dragon
IF that universe even follows the same relative physics -- if not, forget about even trying to think about anything in it whatsoever.
But even then, let's find out what you're saying: "Dragons have to exist because there
might be some out in the infinite number of possible universes beside ours." I believe that's the Spaghetti Monster argument. "You can't
disprove God, because there
might be a God!" Well, for all intents and purposes, there isn't, and if your rationale is governed by empiricism (and it should be) there should be no issue. Not that the arguments between something as abstract and wholly inconceivable as "God" and dragons are at all comparable; the latter is
much easier to shoot down.
Sigh. Not what I meant, what I meant was the definition of what a dragon looks like. The whole "giant lizard" thing. Heck, even your dictionary there admits that dragons only sometimes have wings! Dragons may or may not have 4 legs, may or may not fly, may or may not have wings (and might fly anyway without them), may or may not have scales (feathers, fur), may or may not breath fire (acid, frost, lightning, poison, darkness, light, flowers), may or may not be larger than a dog (horse, mouse, house).
To every possibility there I can likely find a picture that would suit it.
That was my point. And that finding an example of a living creature with such a broad definition is much easier than finding something more exact.
Hm. So your point was, "Dragons have to exist because that term implicitly covers every possible idea of what I or anyone else considers to be a dragon, regardless of how much it deviates from the conventional concept at hand." Well then, logic won't take us anywhere at all, will it? Apparently, there are people that consider dragons to be a species of lizard native to their region, so they
have to be real! To try and get around that deadlock, I'll have to point out that we were talking about
dragons, the famed, scaly, fire-breathing creatures of myth that saturate popculture. If not, you -- or anyone that meant anything different (and I'm pretty sure they didn't) -- have erred for not specifying that from the beginning and have to be suspect of trying to circumvent the argument for fear of losing it. What's more, we weren't even talking about dragons that
might exist! We were talking about the dragons that someone purportedly saw
in Iraq and are apparently our
divine, cold-blooded messengers from the Heavens. We don't need any metaphysics to figure out whether
those are real or not, do we? You merely seemed to abruptly take the road of ambiguity by saying, "Well wait. 'Real' is a flexible term! And so are 'dragons'!" If not plain wrong, certainly irrelevant.