I actually used the word 'deceased in the definition, mate!
Fair enough, but it wasn't in part of the definition of the object, but rather about the belief of observers. You didn't specify that the thing is deceased. You said it was previously living and it may be reasonably assumed to be deceased.
How about waves or echos? Some people claim ghosts are analogous to one or other of these things. Dropping a rock into a pond creates a wave that can be recorded, verified and measured but the wave is not the rock.
Exactly. Please see my posts to Beth regarding the idea of a wave traveling through something. A wave is not a separate thing from the medium. In your pond analogy, the wave is merely a parameter or characteristic of water, which is a thing.
[ETA: So you might say the wave in a pond travels from the point where the rock hit the water to the edge of the pond, but in fact there is no molecule of water that makes that journey. The water molecules only go up and down in a wave pattern. When a "wave" cheer travels around the stadium, the spectators don't travel around the stadium; they stay at their seats.]
Incidentally, you said previously that I was substituing 'haunted' for 'ghost', this felt wrong but it took me a bit of thought to clarify why in my own head. I would draw a distinction between the two on the basis that a location where 'ghostly events' occur is said to be haunted outside of the specific times when said events are occuring.
I have no idea what you're talking about. You said you thought a ghost was an event and not a thing. When you tried to elaborate you said it's because sometimes the only observable phenomena are the actions of the ghost. That doesn't mean a ghost is an event. In a way, you could say the same about anything. When you see a book, light from a source reflects off the book and is sensed by light-sensitive cells in your retina that send a neural signal to the brain. You could say you're only seeing the characteristic of the book (its ability to reflect light) rather than the book. This doesn't make a book an "event".
Similarly, we only detect a number of subatomic particles by the traces they leave. Yet we consider particles to be things and not events.
The actual characteristic to be measured would depend on the ghost that someone claimed existed at the site being investigated, unambiguous video/audio recordings, confirmed movement of objects under genuinely controlled conditions would be a good start.
So you're saying you can't define a ghost until you have one. Without defining
ghost, how do you know you have one?
You don't know what a ghost is until you detect one, yet you can't say what measure or detection can let you know a ghost is there without defining what a ghost is so you know what measures will tell you that you have one.
So how would you answer the OP's question? "It depends"? If so, I agree with you. As I've been saying all along, it depends on how you define ghost. You seem to think that there is a different definition of ghost for each instance of a ghost, which isn't how language (or logic or science) works.
I don't think anyone will ever prove the existance [sic] of ghosts as an independant phenomina [sic], because I don't think that they exist.
I've addressed this point several times before as well. Bigfoot doesn't exist, yet if you gave a valid definition, I could still answer the question, "What would constitute proof of a Bigfoot?"
Believers in ghost believe that it is a real world phenomina[sic] that contridicts [sic] 'scientific dogma' (yes I know....

), saying that something is impossible therefore becomes pointless because the 'as far as we know' excuse comes into play.
"Scientific dogma"? At any rate, now you seem to be agreeing with what I've been saying: that most conventional definitions of ghost include a logical contradiction. If a thing doesn't obey the rules of causality, then there is no way you can say what would constitute proof of its existence.
Incidentally, your point about something being dead but having characteristics of being alive being impossible is wrong, a simple example is the old 'frogs legs and an electrical current' example.
Nope. You're just committing the
composition or
division fallacy (depending on which way you look at it. Basically the whole doesn't have to have the characteristics of all its parts and vice versa. Because a frog is dead doesn't mean all its tissues are dead.
Newly dead but definately [sic] dead and showing charateristis [sic] of life, it wouldn't contitute [sic] a ghost of course!
Yes. So this talk about a dead organism with living tissue isn't relevant to ghosts anyway. When people talk about ghosts as disembodied and so on, they don't mean anything like the resurrection or reanimation of the body. (That's usually covered by the term zombi.)
This is very similar to the point I keep making that when people talk about a ghost as being sometimes invisible, they don't mean it's a material object that is so translucent that it appears invisible unless you change the angle and degree of the light.
I don't believe you can logically define ghosts out of existance [sic] anymore than you can define gods out of existance [sic] (beyond the 99.9%rec) because that whole 'you can't prove a universal negative' thing keeps coming back to bite us on the ass.
If the definition of a term contains a logical contradiction (as in a 4-sided triangle), then by definition the thing can't exist.
I'm not sure what you mean about "you can't prove a universal negative", but I assure you that it is completely logical to prove a negative. Here's a simple example:
If P then not Q.
P.
Therefore not Q.
I think what you mean is that you can't inductively prove that something doesn't exist by the failure to find an example of one. (A single example of a black swan can prove that the statement, "There are no black swans" is false, but you can't prove that there are no black swans inductively by not finding one since it's impossible to search every place in the universe quick enough to rule out a black swan.)
Here's a decent essay on this issue:
http://skepticwiki.org/index.php/"You_Can't_Prove_a_Negative"
Basically, "you can't prove a negative" is only valid for inductive/experimental reasoning and not deductive logic. We can indeed prove that 4 sided triangles are impossible.
That's why I limit the issue of logical contradiction in the definition to matters of deductive (not inductive) proof. I don't think it so much as proves the non-existence of something as it merely notes the contradiction. How else could you answer the question, "What would constitute proof of a 4 sided triangle?"
I can indeed show the same sort of logical contradiction in many (most) conventional definitions of the term
God and in the definition of
ghost based on conventional usage.
Hence I've tried to come up with a usable definition that excludes anything that isn't a ghost. So far as I know no-one claims to know the precise physical charaterists [sic] of a ghost, rather they claim it is a genuine phenomina [sic] that cannot be currently explained, this isn't unknown by science, many things have been discovered or infered from their effects before they themselves were known and things have been accepted as existing long before they were understood or measured.
This is an argument from ignorance. The fact that a phenomenon can't be explained doesn't prove that any particular explanation (as in "it's a ghost") is true.
As with our old friend the 'God of the Gaps' it's an unending struggle, they keep puttin' them up, we keep knocking them down!
Funny you mention this. God of the Gaps is another example of an
argument from ignorance.