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Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy

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Page 1: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Lecture 1Ontology as a Branch

of Philosophy

Page 2: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontology

Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC)

Realist theory of categories

Intelligible universals extending across all domains

Central role of organisms

Medieval scholastics: Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham, … (1200 – 1600)

Aristotelianism as philosophia perennis

Common panscientific ontology and controlled vocabulary (Latin)

2

Page 3: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontology

Descartes (1596 – 1650)

Sceptical doubt initiates subversion of metaphysics, rise of epistemology

Central role of mind

Dualism of mind and matter

Kant (1724 – 1804)

Reality is unknowable

Metaphysics is impossible

We can only know the quasi-fictional domains which we ourselves create

3

Page 4: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontology

Brentano (1838 – 1917)

Rediscovery of Aristotle

Methods of philosophy and of science are one and the same

Husserl (1859 – 1938)

Inventor of formal ontology as a discipline distinct from formal logic

Showed how philosophy and science had become detached from the ‘life world’ of ordinary experience

4

Page 5: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

The Four Phases of Philosophy

rapid practical scepticism mysticism

progress interest

5

Page 6: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

First Cycle

Thales to Stoicism and Pyrrho, Neo-Pythagoreans,

Aristotle Epicureanism Eclectics Neo-Platonists

6

Page 7: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Second Cycle

up to Scotism Ockham, Lull,

Aquinas Nominalists Nicholas of Cusa

7

Page 8: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Third Cycle

Bacon, Rationalists Hume, Berkeley, Kant

Locke Reid German Idealism

8

Page 9: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontologyWittgenstein 1 (ca. 1910 – 1918)

Author of Tractatus

Bases ontology on formal logic in reductionistic atomism

Vienna Circle (1922 – ca. 1938)

Schlick, Neurath, Gödel, Carnap, Gustav Bergmann …

Centrality of logic to philosophy

Construction of philosophy from either physics or sensations as base

9

Page 10: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontologyWittgenstein 2 (ca. 1930 – 1951)

Centrality of language and of language games

Metaphysics = language goes on holiday

British Ordinary Language philosophy

Philosophical problems to be solved by the study of the workings of language

Speech Act Theory (J. L. Austin, 1911-1960)

10

Page 11: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A brief history of ontologyQuine (ca. 1930 – 1951)

Ontological commitment (study not: what there is, but: what sciences believe there is when logically formalized)

Analytical metaphysics (from ca. 1980): Chisholm, Lewis, Armstrong, Fine, Lowe, … beginnings of a rediscovery of metaphysics as first philosophy

What next?11

Page 12: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Fourth Cycle (Continental)

Brentano Husserl Heidegger Derrida and

Polish School the French

12

Page 13: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Fourth Cycle (Analytical)

Frege Vienna Circle Wittgenstein 2 Rorty

Wittgenstein 1 Quine

Russell

13

Page 14: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Each cycle begins with rediscovery of Aristotle and a new theoretical orientation

From the 3rd cycle marked

by invention of new disciplines

3. Empirical natural science

4. Psychology, logic

14

Page 15: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Fifth Cycle

Analytical Metaphysics Ontology

Rediscovery of Aristotle

15

Page 16: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

An example of a practical problem

Increasingly, publishers are exploring ways to tag scientific literature in ways designed to make their contents more easily accessible to computers

For maximal effect, a single set of terms should be used for tagging all literature published in a given domain

How do we select the set of terms (‘ontology’) for each domain?

16

Page 17: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

from: http://www.ploscompbiol.org/doi/pcbi.1000361

17

Page 18: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

http://www.biocurator.org

18

Page 19: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

19

Page 20: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Most successful ontology venture thus far

$100 mill. invested in literature and database curation using the Gene Ontology (GO)

over 11 million annotations relating gene products (proteins) described in the UniProt, Ensembl and other databases to terms in the GO

20

Page 21: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

GO provides a controlled system of representations for use in annotating

data and literature that is

• multi-species

• multi-disciplinary

• multi-granularity, from molecules to population

21

Page 22: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

22

Page 23: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

are structured representations of the domains of molecules, cells, diseases ... which can be used by researchers in many different disciplines who are focused on one and the same biological reality

The GO and its sister ontologies

23

Page 24: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

The goal: virtual science

• consistent (non-redundant) annotation

• cumulative (additive) annotation

yielding, by incremental steps, a virtual map of the entirety of reality that is accessible to computational reasoning

24

Page 25: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

This goal is realizable if we have a common ontology framework

data is retrievable

data is comparable

data is integratable

only to the degree that it is annotated using a common controlled vocabulary

– compare the role of seconds, meters, kilograms … in unifying science

25

Page 26: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

To achieve this end we have to engage in something like philosophy

is this the right way to organize the top level of this portion of the GO?how does the top level of this ontology relate to the top levels of other, neighboring ontologies? 26

Page 27: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle’s Metaphysics

The world is organized via types/universals/categories which are hierarchically organized

27

Page 28: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

This holds, too, of the biological world28

Page 29: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Porphyrian Hierarchy

29

Page 30: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Linnaean Hierarchy

30

Page 31: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

canary

animal

bird

31

Page 32: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canary can singis yellow

has wings

can fly

has feathers

has skin

moves

eats

breathes

species-genus hierarchyas inference machine

32

Page 33: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canary can singis yellow

has wings

can fly

has feathers

has skin

moves

eats

breathes

fishhas finscan swimhas gills

33

Page 34: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

animal

bird

canary

From Species to Genera

can singis yellow

has skin

moves

eatsbreathes

has wingscan flyhas feathers

species-genus hierarchyas inference machine

XX

34

Page 35: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Question: Why are species-genus hierarchies good ways to represent the world for purposes of reasoning?

Answer: They capture the way the world is (Aristotelian realism)

35

Page 36: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Transcription is_a biological process

Transcription part_of gene expression36

Page 37: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Species-genusgenus trees can be represented also as map-like partitions

If Aristotelian realism is right, then such partitions, when correctly built are transparent to the reality beyond

37

Page 38: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

canary

animal

bird

38

Page 39: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canarycanary

39

Page 40: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Alberti’s Grid c.1450

40

Page 41: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Ontologies: windows on

the universals in reality 41

Page 42: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Artist’s Grid

as through a transparent grid42

Page 43: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Species-Genera as Map/Partition

animal

bird

canary

ostrich

fish

canary

43

Page 44: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

siamese

mammal

cat

organism

substancespecies, genera

animal

instances

frog

44

Page 45: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle’s Metaphysics is focused on objects (things, substances, organisms)

The most important universals in his ontology are substance universals

cow man rock planet

which pertain to what a thing is at all times at which it exists

45

Page 46: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

For Aristotle, the world contains also accidents

which pertain to how a thing is at some time at which it exists:

= what holds of a substance per accidens

red hot suntanned spinning

46

Page 47: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Accidents, too, instantiate genera and species

Thus accidents, too, form trees of greater and lesser generality

47

Page 48: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Accidents: Species and instances

this individual accident of redness (this token redness – here, now)

quality

color

red

scarlet

R232, G54, B24

48

Page 49: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Nine Accidental Categoriesquid? substance quantum? quantity quale? qualityad quid? relationubi? placequando? timein quo situ? status/contextin quo habitu? habitusquid agit? actionquid patitur? passion

49

Page 50: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

= relations of inherence(one-sided existential dependence)

John

hunger

Substances are the bearers of accidents

50

Page 51: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle 1.0

an ontology recognizing:substance tokensaccident tokenssubstance typesaccident types

51

Page 52: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle’s Ontological SquareSubstantial Accidental

Second substance

man

cat

ox

Second accident

headache

sun-tan

dread

First substance

this man

this cat

this ox

First accident

this headache

this sun-tan

this dread

Uni

vers

alP

artic

ular

52

Page 53: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Some philosophers accept only part of this four category

ontology

53

Page 54: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Standard Predicate Logic – F(a), R(a,b) ...

Substantial Accidental

Attributes

F, G, R

Individuals

a, b, c

this, that

Uni

vers

alP

artic

ular

54

Page 55: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Bicategorial NominalismSubstantial Accidental

First substance

this man

this cat

this ox

First accident

this headache

this sun-tan

this dread

Uni

vers

alP

artic

ular

55

Page 56: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Process MetaphysicsSubstantial Accidental

Events

Processes“Everything is flux”

Uni

vers

alP

artic

ular

56

Page 57: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

In fact however we need more than the ontological square

Not everything in reality is either a substance or an accident

57

Page 58: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Positive and negative parts

positivepart

negativepartor hole

(made of matter)

(not made of matter)

58

Page 59: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Shoes

59

Page 60: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Pipe

60

Page 61: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Niches, environments are holes

61

Page 62: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Places are holes

62

Page 63: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Places are holes

63

Page 64: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Nine Accidental Categoriesquid? substance quantum? quantity quale? qualityad quid? relationubi? placequando? timein quo situ? status/contextin quo habitu? habitusquid agit? actionquid patitur? passion

64

Page 65: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Places

For Aristotle the place of a substance is the interior boundary of the surrounding body

(for example the interior boundary of the surrounding water where it meets a fish’s skin)

For holes, we need an extension of Aristotle’s metaphysics

65

Page 66: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

A hole in the ground

Solid physical boundaries at the floor and walls

but with a lid that is not made of matter:

hole66

Page 67: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Holes involve two kinds of boundaries

bona fide boundaries which exist independently of our demarcating acts

fiat boundaries which exist only because we put them there

67

Page 68: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Examples

of bona fide boundaries:

an animal’s skin, the surface of the planet

of fiat boundaries:

the boundaries of postal districts and census tracts

68

Page 69: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Mountain

bona fide upper boundaries with a fiat base:

69

Page 70: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

where does the mountain start ?

... a mountain is not a substance70

Page 71: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Cerebral Cortex

71

Page 72: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle 1.5

an ontology ofsubstances + accidents+ holes (and other entities not made of matter)+ fiat and bona fide boundaries+ artefacts and environments

72

Page 73: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Question

How do those parts and dimensions of reality which we encounter in our everyday experience relate to those parts and dimensions of reality which are studied by science?

73

Page 74: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Aristotle 2010

scientific realism coupled with realism about the everyday world

74

Page 75: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Universe/Periodic Tableanimal

bird

canary

ostrich

fishfolk biology

partition of DNA space

75

Page 76: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Universe/Periodic Tableanimal

bird

canary

ostrich

fish

both are transparent partitions of one and the same reality

76

Page 77: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

An organism is a totality of atoms

An organism is a totality of molecules

An organism is a totality of cells

An organism is a single unitary substance

... all of these express veridical partitions

77

Page 78: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Multiple transparent partitions

at different levels of granularity

operating with species-genus hierarchies and with an ontology of substances and accidents along the lines described by Aristotle

substances and accidents reappear in the microscopic and macroscopic worlds of e.g. of chemistry and evolutionary biology

78

Page 79: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

we do not assert

that every level of granularity is structured in substance-accident form -- perhaps there are pure process levels, perhaps there are levels structured as fields

79

Page 80: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Perspectivalism

PerspectivalismDifferent partitions may represent cuts through the same reality which are skew to each other

Not all need be structured in substance-accident terms – perhaps there are pure process levels, perhaps there are levels structured as fields

80

Page 81: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Periodic Table

81

Page 82: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

82

Page 83: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Scientific partitions like the Periodic Table or the Gene Ontology

are transparent to the hierarchical order of an associated domain of objects

they capture reality at different levels of granularity

cellular constituents are visible to the GO, molecular constituents not

83

Page 84: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Perspectivalism

PerspectivalismDifferent partitions may represent cuts through the same reality which are skew to each other

Different partitions may capture reality in ways which involve different degrees of vagueness

84

Page 85: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canary can singis yellow

has wings

can fly

has feathers

has skin

moves

eats

breathes

fishhas finscan swimhas gills

85

Page 86: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canary can singis yellow

has wings

can fly

has feathers

has skin

moves

eats

breathes

fishhas finscan swimhas gills

ostrichhas long thin legsis tallcan‘t fly

yy

86

Page 87: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

From Species to Genera

animal

bird

canary can singis yellow

has wings

can fly

has feathers

has skin

moves

eats

breathes

fishhas finscan swimhas gills

ostrichhas long thin legsis tallcan’t fly

yy

87

Page 88: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Theory of vagueness

How can -based conceptualizations be transparent,if the world is shaped like this

?

88

Page 89: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Observe that no such problems arise for the closed worlds constructed in information systems

hierarchies as reasoning tools work very well for the closed worlds of database engineers

89

Page 90: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

whether a file is in a given folder on your hard-drive is completely determinate:

90

Page 91: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Dewey Decimal Classification

91

Page 92: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Dewey Decimal Classification (Detail)

92

Page 93: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

No borderline cases in the closed world of a databaseEvery book is assigned a determinate Dewey Classification Number at birth

111.560xxx

this yields a classificationthat is completely crisp

93

Page 94: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

... and always up-to-dateTo be a book = to have a reference number in the Catalogue System

Each of the ontologies produced by ontological engineers deals with objects which are constructed (Kant would say “constituted”) by the database itself

94

Page 95: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Kant

95

Page 96: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Sharpness of database reality vs. vagueness of flesh and blood realityHow to deal with the problemof vagueness of our representations?

How to create adequate representations beyond the quasi-Kantian realm of database engineers

96

Page 97: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Kantian Constructivism

There are no species-genus hierarchies in reality unless we put them there

The world – insofar as it is accessible to us through our concepts at all – is a closed system tailored by us to fit those concepts

97

Page 98: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Kantianism seems to work very well for the closed worlds of database environments

There Midas-touch epistemology is appropriate

If our database recognizes only two genders, then the world represented in the database is a world in which there are only two genders

98

Page 99: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

hard vs. soft categories

Kantianism: we constitute/shape (empirical) reality in such a way that it corresponds to our categories

Aristotelianism: reality in itself is messy, but our categories fit nonetheless

99

Page 100: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

For Aristotelians

when we apply general terms to reality we are aware that we may have to deal with an opposition

... between standard or focal or prototypical instances of the corresponding universals

... and non-standard or ‘fringe’ instances

100

Page 101: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

birds

ostrich

Natural categories have borderline cases

sparrow

101

Page 102: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

... they have a kernel/penumbra structure

kernel of focal

instances

penumbra of borderline cases

102

Page 103: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Species Genera as Tree

canary

animal

bird fish

ostrich

103

Page 104: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Species-Genera as Map/Partition

animal

bird

canary

ostrich

fish

canary

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Page 105: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

animal

bird

canary

ostrich

fish

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Page 106: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

 

Coarse-grained Partition

what happens when a fringe instance arises ?

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Aristotle 2010you seek to find a finer grained partition which will recognize the phenomenon in question and allow an explanation of why it deviates from the prototype

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Page 108: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

The advance of science

is not an advance away from Aristotle towards something better.

Provided Aristotle is interpreted aright, it is a rigorous demonstration of the correctness of his ontological approach

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Page 109: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Kantianism

each partition gives only a partial view (no complete map) of any reality beyond

and thus it gives a distorted view

– we can only really know what we ourselves have constructed

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Page 110: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

For the Aristotelian, there are two sorts of partitions:

those which relate merely to a created, surrogate world (Library of Congress Catalog)

those which are transparent to some independent reality beyond (Gene Ontology)

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Page 111: Lecture 1 Ontology as a Branch of Philosophy. A brief history of ontology Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) Realist theory of categories Intelligible universals

Concepts vs. categories

on the Kantian reading species are concepts, which we bring to reality

on the Aristotelian reading the world itself exhibits a species-genus structure independently of how we conceive it and we do our best to map this structure in our representations

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Basic Formal Ontology (BFO)

ContinuantOccurrent(Process)

IndependentContinuant

DependentContinuant

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