1 an introductory course in ontology and the forms of social organization

95
1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

Upload: georgiana-barber

Post on 17-Jan-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

1

An Introductory Course in Ontology

and the Forms of Social Organization

Page 2: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

2

1. The Meaning of Life

2. The Tools of Ontology

3. A Unified Theory of Granularity and Vagueness (UMCS)

4. Partitions of Reality: How Can We Live in Several Worlds at Once

5. John Searle's Ontology of Social Reality and Its Problems

6. The Ontology of the Environment: Objects and Their Settings

7. The Ontology of Geography

8. The Ontology of Social Reality: What Sorts of Objects are Social Wholes

9. The Metaphysics of Real Estate: Economics, Politics and History

10.Concluding Lecture: Social Reality and the Meaning of Life

Page 3: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

3

The Meaning of Life

The Tools of Ontology

A Unified Theory of Granularity and Vagueness (UMCS)

Partitions of Reality: How Can We Live in Several Worlds at Once

John Searle's Ontology of Social Reality and Its Problems

The Ontology of the Environment: Objects and Their Settings

The Ontology of Geography

The Ontology of Social Reality: What Sorts of Objects are Social Wholes

The Metaphysics of Real Estate: Economics, Politics and History

Concluding Lecture: Social Reality and the Meaning of Life

Page 4: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

4

Why

happiness happiness

does not make a life worth living

Page 5: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

5

The Meaning of Life

The Tools of Ontology

A Unified Theory of Granularity and Vagueness (UMCS)

Partitions of Reality: How Can We Live in Several Worlds at Once

John Searle's Ontology of Social Reality and Its Problems

The Ontology of the Environment: Objects and Their Settings

The Ontology of Geography

The Ontology of Social Reality: What Sorts of Objects are Social Wholes

The Metaphysics of Real Estate: Economics, Politics and History

Concluding Lecture: Social Reality and the Meaning of Life

Page 6: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

6

The Meaning of Life

The Tools of Ontology

A Unified Theory of Granularity and Vagueness (UMCS)

Partitions of Reality: How Can We Live in Several Worlds at Once

John Searle's Ontology of Social Reality and Its Problems

The Ontology of the Environment: Objects and Their Settings

The Ontology of Geography

The Ontology of Social Reality: What Sorts of Objects are Social Wholes

The Metaphysics of Real Estate: Economics, Politics and History

Concluding Lecture: Social Reality and the Meaning of Life

Page 7: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

7

The Meaning of Life

The Tools of Ontology

A Unified Theory of Granularity and Vagueness (UMCS)

Partitions of Reality: How Can We Live in Several Worlds at Once

John Searle's Ontology of Social Reality and Its Problems

The Ontology of the Environment: Objects and Their Settings

The Ontology of Geography

The Ontology of Social Reality: What Sorts of Objects are Social Wholes

The Metaphysics of Real Estate: Economics, Politics and History

Concluding Lecture: Social Reality and the Meaning of Life

Page 8: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

8

WhyHappiness,Happiness,

Love,Love,

Knowledge,Knowledge,

Money,Money,

FriendshipFriendship

and Religion,and Religion,

do not make a life worth living

Page 9: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

9

This Lecture:An Introduction to Ontology

Page 10: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

10

Institute for Formal Ontology and Medical Information Science

(IFOMIS)

University of Leipzig

Page 11: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

11

Formal Ontology

term coined by Husserl

= the theory of those ontological structures

such as part-whole, universal-particular

which apply to all domains whatsoever

Page 12: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

12

Edmund Husserl

Page 13: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

13

Logical Investigations¸1900/01

– Aristotelian theory of universals

– the theory of part and whole

– the theory of dependence

– the theory of boundary, continuity and contact

Page 14: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

14

Formal Ontology vs. Formal Logic

Formal ontology deals with the interconnections of things

with objects and properties, parts and wholes, relations and collectives

Formal logic deals with the interconnections of truths

with consistency and validity, or and not

Page 15: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

15

Formal Ontology vs. Formal Logic

Formal ontology deals with formal ontological structures

Formal logic deals with formal logical structures

‘formal’ = obtain in all material spheres of reality

Page 16: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

16

for Frege, Russell, Lesniewski,

Wittgenstein, Quine, Woodger:

Logic is a ‘Zoology of Facts’

Formal theories are theories of reality

with one intended interpretation

= the world

Better: formal ontology is a zoology of facts (or of entities in general)

Page 17: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

17

a directly depicting language

‘John’ ‘( ) is red’

Object Property

Frege

Page 18: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

18

Wittgenstein’s Tractatus

Propositions

States of affairs

are pictures of

Page 19: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

19

a language to map

formal-ontological structures in reality

how deal with dynamic entities?

Page 20: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

20

Page 21: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

21

a new methodof constituent ontology

to study a domain ontologically

is to establish the parts and moments of the domain

and the interrelations between them

Page 22: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

22

Page 23: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

23

A Network of Domain Ontologies

Material (Regional) Ontologies

Basic Formal Ontology

Page 24: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

24

A Network of Domain Ontologies

BFO

Page 25: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

25

A Network of Domain Ontologies

B(Chem)O

BFO

Page 26: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

26

A Network of Domain Ontologies

B(Med)O

B(Chem)O

BFO

Page 27: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

27

A Network of Domain Ontologies

B(Cell)O

B(Med)O

B(Chem)O

BFO

Page 28: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

28

A Network of Domain Ontologies

B(Gen)O B(Cell)O

B(Med)O

B(Chem)O

BFO

Page 29: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

29

Page 30: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

30

Reality

Page 31: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

31

Reality

Page 32: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

32

Page 33: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

33

Reality

Page 34: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

34

Reality

is complicated

Page 35: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

35

What is the best language to describe this complexity?

Page 36: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

36

Anglocentric Realism

We have a huge amount of knowledge of reality,

at many different levels of granularity,

from microphysics to cosmology

Page 37: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

37

Sources of Ontological Knowledge

the study of ancient texts

the construction and testing of formal theories

the consideration of difficult counterexamples

the results of the natural sciences

technically extended English

Page 38: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

38

Anglocentric Realism

TEE = Technically Extended English

= English extended by the technical vocabularies of

chemistry, genetics, medicine, astronomy, etc.

Page 39: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

39

Anglocentric Realism

Our knowledge of reality as expressed in Technically Extended English

is increasing by the hour

Page 40: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

40

Unfortunately

… there are problems with TEE as a formal representation language

(cf. Tarski)

Page 41: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

41

Nouns and verbs

Substances and processes

Continuants and occurrents

In preparing an inventory of reality

we keep track of these two different categories of entities in two different ways

Page 42: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

42

Natural language

glues them together indiscriminately

substance

t i m

e

process

Page 43: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

43

Snapshot vs. Video

substance

t i m

e

process

Page 44: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

44

Mesoscopic reality

is divided at its natural joints

into substances:

animals, bones, rocks, potatoes

(This applies also at other levels of granularity – atoms, molecules, cells, planets, galaxies)

Page 45: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

45

The Ontology of Substances

Substances form natural kinds

(universals, species + genera)

Page 46: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

46

Processes

t i m e

Page 47: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

47

Processes

merge into one another

Process kinds merge into one another

… few clean joints either between tokens or between types

Page 48: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

48

Processes

t i m e

Page 49: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

49

Some clean joints

derive from the fact that processes are dependent on substances

(my headache is cleanly demarcated from your headache)

Page 50: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

50

Some clean joints

in realms of artefactual processes:

weddings

chess games

dog shows

ontology tutorials

some sharp divisions imputed via clocks, calendars

Page 51: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

51

Clean joints

also through language

= fiat demarcations

Quinean gerrymandering ontologies are attractive for processes

not for substances

Quine: there are no substances

Page 52: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

52

Two sorts of dependent entities

processes: unfold in time

individual qualities, roles, functions, powers: like substances: they exist in toto at any instant of time when they exist at all)

Page 53: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

53

Processes and qualities, like substances, are concrete denizens

of reality

My headache, like this lump of cheese, exists here and now,

and both will cease to exist at some time in the future.

Page 54: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

54

Substances and processes

t i m

e

process

demand different sorts of inventories

Page 55: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

55

Substances demand 3-D partonomies

space

Page 56: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

56

Processes demand 4D-partonomies

t i m e

Page 57: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

57

Processes and qualities

tropes, individual properties

Examples of processes

a whistling, a blushing, a speech, a run,

Examples of qualities:

my knowledge of French

the whiteness of this cheese

the warmth of this stone

Page 58: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

58

Processes may have temporal parts

The first 5 minutes of my headache is a temporal part of my headache

The first game of the match is a temporal part of the whole match

Page 59: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

59

Substances and qualities do not have temporal parts

The first 5-minute phase of my existence is not a temporal part of me

It is a temporal part of that complex Process which is my life

Page 60: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

60

Page 61: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

61

Substances have spatial parts

Page 62: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

62

Page 63: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

63

Page 64: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

64

How do we glue these two different sorts of entities together mereologically?

How do we include them both in a single inventory of reality?

How do we fit these two entities together within a single system of representations?

Page 65: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

65

You are a substance

Your life is a process

You are 3-dimensional

Your life is 4-dimensional

Page 66: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

66

Substances and processes form two distinct orders of being Substances exist as a whole at every point in time at which they exist at all

Processes unfold through time, and are never present in full at any given instant during which they exist.

When do both exist to be inventoried together?

Page 67: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

67

John spent the first 25 years of his life in Kansas

when does a truthmaker for this sentence exist?

what do ‘John’ and ‘Kansas’ refer to?

Page 68: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

68

Main problem

English swings back and forth between two distinct depictions of reality

… imposing both 3-D partitions (yielding substances) and 4-D partitions (yielding processes) at the same time

Page 69: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

69

Main problem

There is a polymorphous ontological promiscuity of the English sentence,

which is inherited also by the form ‘F(a)’

Page 70: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

70

Solution: two complementary basic ontologies

Four-dimensionalism

Presentism

Page 71: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

71

1. Four-dimensionalism

All entities are spatio-temporally extended portions of an atemporal four-dimensional whole called reality

(God’s eye perspective)

Problem:

change does not exist

Page 72: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

72

2. Presentism

Both substances and processes exist, but only what exists now exists at all.\

(Perspective of mortal man)

Problem:

‘Napoleon ruled before Clinton’

‘John lived in Kansas for 25 years’

Page 73: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

73

Neither of these solutions is completely adequate

Hence

a good formal ontology must somehow contain them both

Page 74: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

74

A good formal ontology

must divide into two sub-ontologies:

1. a four-dimensionalist ontology (of processes)

cf. Quine

2. a modified presentist ontology

cf. Brentano, Aristotle, Chisholm

(takes tense seriously)

Page 75: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

75

These represent two views

of the same rich and messy reality, the reality captured promiscuously by TEE

Page 76: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

76

The Four-Dimensionalist Ontology

t i m e

Page 77: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

77

boundaries are mostly fiat

t i m e

everything is flux

Page 78: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

78

mereology works without restriction everywhere here

t i m e

clinical trial

Page 79: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

79

here time exists as part of the domain of the ontology

Page 80: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

80

The Time-Stamped Ontology

t1

t3t2

here time exists outside the ontology, as an index or time-stamp

Page 81: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

81

mereology works without restriction in every instantaneous 3-D section through

reality

Page 82: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

82

Three views/partitions of the same reality

Page 83: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

83

all contain huge amounts of knowledge of this reality

against Kant

Page 84: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

84

The Time-Stamped (3-D) Ontology

t1

t3t2

Page 85: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

85

ontology as a sequence of filmed images

Page 86: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

86

each section through reality is to be conceived in presentist terms

each section includes everything which exists, including everything which is happening,

at the corresponding now

Page 87: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

87

the two ontologies can be glued together as a video is

glued together out of snapshots

Page 88: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

88

Page 89: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

89

each section through realitycontains both substances

and qualities

Page 90: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

90

each section through realitycontains both substances

and qualities

standing to each other in a relation of one-sidedontological dependence

Page 91: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

91

Page 92: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

92

Basic Formal OntologyConcrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]Concrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 4-D Ontology[Perdure. Unfold in Time]Entity in 4-D Ontology

[Perdure. Unfold in Time]

Processual EntityProcessual EntitySpatio-Temporal Region

Dim = T, T+0, T+1, T+2, T+3Spatio-Temporal Region

Dim = T, T+0, T+1, T+2, T+3

Spatial Regionof Dimension 0,1,2,3

Spatial Regionof Dimension 0,1,2,3 Dependent EntityDependent Entity

Independent EntityIndependent Entity

Quality (Your Redness, My Tallness)[Form Quality Regions/Scales]

Quality (Your Redness, My Tallness)[Form Quality Regions/Scales]

Role, Function, PowerHave realizations (called: Processes)

Role, Function, PowerHave realizations (called: Processes)

Substance[maximally connected causal unity]

Substance[maximally connected causal unity]

Boundary of Substance *Fiat or Bona Fide or MixedBoundary of Substance *

Fiat or Bona Fide or Mixed

Aggregate of Substances * (includes masses of stuff? liquids?)

Aggregate of Substances * (includes masses of stuff? liquids?)

Fiat Part of Substance * Nose, Ear, Mountain

Fiat Part of Substance * Nose, Ear, Mountain

Process [Has Unity]Clinical trial; exercise of role

Process [Has Unity]Clinical trial; exercise of role

Fiat Part of Process*Fiat Part of Process*

Aggregate of Processes*Aggregate of Processes*

Instantaneous Temporal Boundary of Process (= Ingarden’s 'Event’)*

Instantaneous Temporal Boundary of Process (= Ingarden’s 'Event’)*

Quasi-ProcessJohn’s Youth. John’s Life

Quasi-ProcessJohn’s Youth. John’s Life

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values, Obligations

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values, Obligations

Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College, Corporation

Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College, Corporation

Quasi-Role/Function/PowerThe Functions of the PresidentQuasi-Role/Function/Power

The Functions of the President

Page 93: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

93

Basic Formal Ontology

Concrete EntityConcrete Entity

Entity in 3-D OntologyEntity in 3-D OntologyEntity in 4-D OntologyEntity in 4-D Ontology

ProcessProcessSpatio-Temporal

Region Spatio-Temporal

Region Spatial RegionSpatial Region Dependent EntityDependent Entity Independent EntityIndependent Entity

Quality (Your Redness,

My Tallness)

Quality (Your Redness,

My Tallness)

Substance(John, his ox)Substance

(John, his ox)

3D 4Dsnapshot video

Page 94: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

94

Basic Formal OntologyConcrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]Concrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 4-D Ontology[Perdure. Unfold in Time]Entity in 4-D Ontology

[Perdure. Unfold in Time]

Processual EntityProcessual EntitySpatio-Temporal Region

Dim = T, T+0, T+1, T+2, T+3Spatio-Temporal Region

Dim = T, T+0, T+1, T+2, T+3

Spatial Regionof Dimension 0,1,2,3

Spatial Regionof Dimension 0,1,2,3 Dependent EntityDependent Entity

Independent EntityIndependent Entity

Quality (Your Redness, My Tallness)[Form Quality Regions/Scales]

Quality (Your Redness, My Tallness)[Form Quality Regions/Scales]

Role, Function, PowerHave realizations (called: Processes)

Role, Function, PowerHave realizations (called: Processes)

Substance[maximally connected causal unity]

Substance[maximally connected causal unity]

Boundary of Substance *Fiat or Bona Fide or MixedBoundary of Substance *

Fiat or Bona Fide or Mixed

Aggregate of Substances * (includes masses of stuff? liquids?)

Aggregate of Substances * (includes masses of stuff? liquids?)

Fiat Part of Substance * Nose, Ear, Mountain

Fiat Part of Substance * Nose, Ear, Mountain

Process [Has Unity]Clinical trial; exercise of role

Process [Has Unity]Clinical trial; exercise of role

Fiat Part of Process*Fiat Part of Process*

Aggregate of Processes*Aggregate of Processes*

Instantaneous Temporal Boundary of Process (= Ingarden’s 'Event’)*

Instantaneous Temporal Boundary of Process (= Ingarden’s 'Event’)*

Quasi-ProcessJohn’s Youth. John’s Life

Quasi-ProcessJohn’s Youth. John’s Life

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values, Obligations

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values, Obligations

Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College, Corporation

Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College, Corporation

Quasi-Role/Function/PowerThe Functions of the PresidentQuasi-Role/Function/Power

The Functions of the President

Page 95: 1 An Introductory Course in Ontology and the Forms of Social Organization

95

Basic Formal OntologyConcrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]Concrete Entity

[Exists in Space and Time]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 3-D Ontology[Endure. No Temporal Parts]

Entity in 4-D Ontology[Perdure. Unfold in Time]Entity in 4-D Ontology

[Perdure. Unfold in Time]

ProcessProcessDependent EntityDependent Entity Independent Entity

Independent Entity

Quasi-ProcessMoney earning

interest

Quasi-ProcessMoney earning

interest

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values,

Obligations

Quasi-Quality Prices, Values,

Obligations Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College,

Corporation

Quasi-SubstanceChurch, College,

Corporation

Quasi-RoleFunction/PowerThe Functions

of the President

Quasi-RoleFunction/PowerThe Functions

of the President