This is a silly argument based on John99 using his own special definition of "alive" and refusing to note how he's defining, save that we know he's *not* amenable to definition 1 in virtually any printed definition of the word "alive."
He's taking a figurative meaning of "alive" that has developed from the primary meaning, applying it to trees and concluding that they do not meet that figurative definition. John99 might as well claim that the Sun is not "hot" because "hot" means either "arousing intense popular interest or excitement ('Comic book movies are hot properties right now.')" or "physically attractive ('She is so hot.')" He might as well go further and say that trees are not "life" because they have no jobs, hobbies or friends (and so can very easily be said to "have no life.")
At the end of the day his special semantics don't matter, and no one should be flustered by them. Trees are alive in the literal sense no matter what John99 says and there are some figurative senses of the word in which they are not "alive." The subjectivity of the latter is obvious, given that John99 refers to bacteria as alive, even though bacteria are more like rocks than trees are like rocks. About half of all bacteria are incapable of directed movement, a fact that seems to be key to why John99's has issues believing in living trees, based on a peculiar definition of 'living.'
His special definition doesn't really matter though. It's personal to him, and it will cause him greater hardship than it will ever cause any tree. Language is a means of communicating ideas, and as such it works because there is a general consensus about what words mean. Often enough two people will have a different understanding of the meaning of a given word. The only issue here, is that Joohn99, is that John99's is such an outlier that I doubt 1 person in a 1000 would refuse to concede that trees are alive in the most common sense of that word.
Sadly, though language is a means of communication, we are 5 pages into this thread and John99 has *still* not clearly communicated what his definition of 'alive' is. John99, if you must point to an online dictionary, please let us know which numbered definitions apply, as Merriam-Webster's definition #1 clearly includes trees and coma patients and unconscious mountain lions alike.
