Another pragmatic, sensible response and suggested solution from John. (01)
SGIS
Antoinette Arsic
Sr. Systems Engineer
8618 Westwood Center Drive, Suite 100
Vienna, VA 22182
703-506-8621
443-567-2703
aarsic@xxxxxxxx
www.SGIS.com
________________________________________
From: ontolog-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[ontolog-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John F. Sowa
[sowa@xxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 9:12 PM
To: [ontolog-forum]; Patrick Cassidy
Cc: standard-upper-ontology@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [ontolog-forum] Foundation Ontology [was Semantic Web
shortcomings] (02)
Pat, (03)
If you like the term 'foundation ontology', I won't complain. But
please note that the method of the Longman dictionary is totally
different from anything that we have been calling an ontology. Their
defining vocabulary, as they say in the introduction, is intended for
people who are learning English as a second language. It is not an
ontology like Cyc, SUMO, BFO, Dolce, etc. (04)
The people who use the Longman Learners' Dictionary have an enormous
amount of background knowledge beyond any computer system today.
They are able to use that knowledge to interpret the very incomplete
so-called definitions. That may be useful for people, but it's not
an ontology that could be used for deductive reasoning by computers. (05)
On the other hand, those very incomplete definitions are not bad for
specifying an incomplete type hierarchy, somewhat along the lines of
WordNet. Something at that level can be extremely valuable, as the
many applications of WordNet have demonstrated. In fact, it could
also be useful as a basis for a *lightweight* low-cost foundation. (06)
Following is my recommendation for a foundation ontology (FO).
I'm sending this note to both ontolog-forum and the SUO mailing
list, because something along these lines could be appropriate
for an IEEE standard: (07)
1. A lightweight, low-cost foundation, an initial version of which
could be developed relatively quickly without a large investment
of cash, but which could evolve into something much more complete. (08)
2. The initial components of the FO would take advantage of resources
that have proved to be successful in practical applications. But
the principles should also have a sound logical basis to enable
a smooth evolution and transition toward a more complete system. (09)
3. A simple, but widely used resource is WordNet. Its advantage is
wide coverage, and its lack of detailed axioms enables it to be
adapted to multiple purposes without creating contradictions.
However, many aspects of WordNet, such as its top-level categories,
would require revisions or replacement before being adopted and
adapted into the FO type hierarchy. Many other resources could
also be added, but with considerable revisions to avoid conflicts.
The FO hierarchy would initially have very few axioms, of which
the primary ones would be the subtype/supertype relations. (010)
4. Other important resources are the standards for dates, times,
geographical locations, units of measurement, monetary units,
chemical elements and compounds, etc. The terminology and the
mathematical relations among terms should be related to the FO
hierarchy and made available for all applications. (011)
5. Organizations for the sciences, engineering, law, medicine,
businesses, governments, agriculture, etc., have established
standardized terminology with standard definitions and detailed
specifications. These terms should be related to the basic
FO hierarchy, but a suitable naming scheme is necessary to
distinguish homonyms used in different standards and revisions. (012)
6. The development of the FO should be coordinated with existing
bodies such as ISO, W3C, and various governmental and non-
governmental organizations. The naming scheme should enable
different bodies to control their own terminology while relating
them to the basic FO type hierarchy. (013)
There is a lot more to be said, but I believe that something along
these lines would be (a) relatively inexpensive to get started,
(b) upward compatible with existing practices, (c) immediately useful
for practical applications, and (d) compatible with both formal
deductive systems and much more informal tools used for information
classification and retrieval. (014)
If we do a good job, it could become an IEEE standard. (015)
John Sowa (016)
_________________________________________________________________
Message Archives: http://ontolog.cim3.net/forum/ontolog-forum/
Subscribe/Config: http://ontolog.cim3.net/mailman/listinfo/ontolog-forum/
Unsubscribe: mailto:ontolog-forum-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Shared Files: http://ontolog.cim3.net/file/
Community Wiki: http://ontolog.cim3.net/wiki/
To Post: mailto:ontolog-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (017)
_________________________________________________________________
Message Archives: http://ontolog.cim3.net/forum/ontolog-forum/
Subscribe/Config: http://ontolog.cim3.net/mailman/listinfo/ontolog-forum/
Unsubscribe: mailto:ontolog-forum-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Shared Files: http://ontolog.cim3.net/file/
Community Wiki: http://ontolog.cim3.net/wiki/
To Post: mailto:ontolog-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (018)
|