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12 - Ontological Complexity and Human Culture

from Part IV - Knowledge Representation

David J. Saab
Affiliation:
Penn State University
Frederico Fonseca
Affiliation:
Penn State University
Ruth Hagengruber
Affiliation:
University of Paderborn
Uwe V. Riss
Affiliation:
SAP
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Summary

Introduction

The explosion of the infosphere has led to a proliferation of metadata and formal ontology artefacts for information systems. Information scientists are creating ontologies and metadata in order to facilitate the sharing of meaningful information rather than similarly structured information. Formal ontologies are a complex form of metadata that specify the underlying concepts and their relationships that comprise the information of and for an information system. The most common understanding of ontology in computer and information sciences is Gruber's specification of a conceptualization. However, formal ontologies are problematic in that they simultaneously crystallize and decontextualize information, which in order to be meaningful must be adaptive in context. In trying to construct a correct taxonomical system, formal ontologies are focused on syntactic precision rather than meaningful exchange of information. Smith describes accurately the motivation and practice of ontology creation:

It becomes a theory of the ontological content of certain representations … The elicited principles may or may not be true, but this, to the practitioner … is of no concern, since the significance of these principles lies elsewhere – for instance in yielding a correct account of the taxonomical system used by speakers of a given language or by scientists working in a given discipline.

It is not fair to claim that syntax is irrelevant, but the meaning we make of information is dependent upon more than its syntactic structure.

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Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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