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Amish power plant

See the definition for "Dutch Rudder" and add one or more people to the equation. It's still totally not gay!
I went to this after party last night and met a few of really great guys who were talking about this thing called an "Amish Power Plant" and asked if I wanted to give it a go. I told them I wasn't into men and they told me, it's totally not gay! So I agreed and made some life long friends.
by Jackie M. Paper January 5, 2022
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Forehead Log Plant

The planting of a log of shit on another's forehead.
Josue's great Forehead Log Plant on David left a brown stain that almost got in his hair.
by Levi Addalon March 12, 2023
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I'm gonna plant my foot, up your ass!

A term that when heard should inspire a sense of OH F**K... I'M ABOUT TO DIE :), it is NOT a sexual term, and essentially means the same as "I will kick your ass, and not in a good way", if delivered with proper intimidation can immediately shut down a bad situation.
person 1: (is stuck in an enclosed space)

person two: should i help him, Person C?

person c: methinks he deserves to be stuck

person 1: If you don't help me, I'm gonna plant my foot, up your ass!
by abitchyyoutuber December 25, 2023
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Jessica's Plant

Jessica's Plant is a plot device whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem in a story is resolved by repeating the occurrence for two or more characters or groups while neither is aware that the other experienced the same thing. Its function is generally to resolve an otherwise irresolvable plot situation, to appease the story teller, to bring the tale allow the story to continue unimpeded, or act as a comedic device.
"Hey, did ever read Stealy Cap?"

"Yeah, the writing is lazy though. Each book is just a new Jessica's Plant because Stealy and his enemies never remember anything."
by Bex Belling June 11, 2024
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Jessica's Plant

Jessica's Plant is a plot device whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem in a story is resolved by repeating the occurrence for two or more characters or groups while neither is aware that the other experienced the same thing. Its function is generally to resolve an otherwise irresolvable plot situation, to appease the story teller, to bring the tale allow the story to continue unimpeded, or act as a comedic device.
"Hey, did ever read Stealy Cap?"

"Yeah, the writing is lazy though. Each book is just a new Jessica's Plant because Stealy and his enemies never remember anything."
by Bex Belling June 11, 2024
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The debate over whether plants' complex adaptive behaviors—like root networks solving resource distribution puzzles or leaves optimizing sunlight capture—count as a form of "thinking." The hard problem here is: If they have no neurons, where and what is the "cognitive workspace"? How do we recognize cognition in a system so alien, operating on a timescale of hours or days, without a central processor? It's the challenge of defining cognition so it isn't just "brain-based information processing," potentially forcing us to see intelligence in silent, slow-motion biological algorithms.
Example: "The vine grew a perfect path through the lattice, avoiding painted (toxic) sections. The hard problem of plant cognition: Was that a cognitive choice, a simple chemical tropism, or a beautiful, mindless computation? And if there's no difference in outcome, does the 'mind' part even matter?"
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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The most speculative leap: the question of whether plants, with their integrated signaling and responsive behaviors, could have any form of subjective experience. Not thinking, but feeling—even if it's a slow, diffuse sensation of light, damage, or attraction. With no brain or nervous system, what would consciousness even be made of? It’s the ultimate challenge to our animal-centric view of sentience, pushing the boundaries of whether consciousness is a universal property of complex, self-sustaining systems or a unique trick of neural circuitry.
Example: "The mystic says the forest has a spirit. The scientist says it's a chemical network. The hard problem of plant consciousness is the unsettling void between: what if they're both right? What if that 'spirit' is a real, subjective experience, but one so alien and slow we could never recognize, let alone measure, it?"
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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