Now that I've read the piece, Dan, that you provided...
Using that logic, it's a classification, not a fact, that my Nikon D7000 is a camera. To this layperson, that distinction between a classification and a fact is far less than unhelpful.
It would be far more helpful and far less disingenuous if the scientific community would admit that their facts are often nothing more than opinions because the lay community then would be able to more effectively apply the scientific information in the real world.
Bringing this back full circle to the discussion about the definition of exposure, put 100 people in a room who have never held a camera. Explain to them that their only controls of exposure are shutter and aperture. Put another 100 people in a room who have also never held a camera. Explain to them that they have three controls of exposure: shutter, aperture and ISO value. Then send those two hundred people out to take photos. I'll bet my last dollar that the second group of people will be able to make better exposures on average than the first group of people. And that's, frankly, all I care about, not the so-called accurate definition.