I thought the "common use, but still wrong" comment would have cleared this up.
You are arguing context. From a scientific context, to reduce amplitude is to "damp", not dampen. There is a secondary meaning of "dampen" meaning to "dull or deaden" as in to "dampen" one's spirits. That isn't a scientific definiton. Any good dictionary should precede a definition with a context. In the event of "damp", dictionaries will precede it with "physics" or "science" (check it out for yourself). The definition for "dampen" isn't preceded by such a context, meaning it's strictly conversational and non-scientific. From a strictly proper perspective, if you speak to an engineer and say "dampen" instead of "damp", prepare to be corrected.
/nerd
/diction nazi
Ok, you mentioned the PAR, but how does the "design" of an approach factor into a 172 doing an ILS? They don't have RADALTs, so AGL means nothing to them as an indication in the cockpit. You are calling it a "Decision
Height", when in fact, the number is actually measured in MSL.
And as for the RNAV, you could argue that GPS-oboard or ILS on deck, a "glideslope" is ALWAYS going to be HEIGHTS determined by a computer for a given angle of approach, whether it's an ILS in the runway or a GPS receiver get signals from above.