Breakfast cereal served the standard way, in a bowl with cold milk poured on and eaten with a spoon. Does this count as a soup, why or why not? Defend your answer with logic (or emotion, whatever I'm not your dad)
We create concepts like soup because they're useful, not because such concepts represent the true underlying state of the universe. So whether a cereal is a soup depends on the reason you care about soups.
I argue that a hotdog is not a sandwich and the bun is not split through entirely and it is generally presented with the bread to the sides putting it into the roll category. A sandwich has bread spilt entirely through and uses horizontal stacking for assembly
Edit to add logic. There are plenty of milk-based soups, and I don't think that baking ingredients ahead of time and adding them cold changes the dish from being a soup. Maybe we're missing out on some delicious hot soup leaving cereal cold?
Why would it be? Soup is made primarily out of vegetables and typically served hot. Honestly, why not just look up "Soup" on Wikipedia or a dictionary.
But you're just here arguing about semantics anyway.
Well duh, this is a post about the meaning of soup. We're all here arguing semantics. Anyway, if you can justify the meaning of "vegetable" by its culinary use in the kitchen, then we might as well shortcut this chain of thinking and use that argument directly for soup.
Clearly cereal is not a soup, going by its culinary use in the kitchen.