To: | "[ontolog-forum]" <ontolog-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
---|---|
From: | rrovetto@xxxxxxxxxxx |
Date: | Fri, 24 May 2013 02:15:55 +0900 |
Message-id: | <CADM4J9wRyhgCtbNwr1jgf5cLb0WOCTdRwc9NT+wUg0-=5owdkA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
Replies inline after 'RR:'
On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 1:15 AM, Patrick Cassidy <pat@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: Name of thread changed to the more specific topic. One can distinguish between abstract entities as a philosophical or ontological category and the abstraction process persons engage in. Abstract entities, at least in philosophy, are typically construed as non-spatio-temporal. They are neither in space nor time, and therefore have no physical location or extent in that sense. Since physical representations are physical (spatio-temporal) they would not be types of abstract entities. However, text and images are not abstract entities. That is, unless you are considering the type/universal (rather than the token/instance) as being beyond space-time.
RR: If the EM waves represent information, then where is the information such that it has physical extent? It is the EM waves that have physical extent (physicists should chime in). The represented need not be of the same type as that which represents. You talk about information content. Have you looked at the Information Artifact Ontology? It might be useful to you. It distinguishes between the information content and that which bears or carries the information (the information bearer). Examples of the latter include markings on paper, and perhaps your EM waves.
RR: What do you mean by 'exists'? RR: A sentence is not an abstract entity. The meaning of a sentence, or the proposition expressed by a sentence, are commonly considered examples of abstract entities (from a philosophical community perspective, of course). Individual particles (electrons, say) are described as having exactly the same properties. This can be modeled by with an Electronic class characterized by a number of properties, and individual (instances) electrons having property-instances inhere (or whatever relation you use) in those electrons. So it sounds like you're making the type-token or universal-instance distinction. I'm not sure what the problem is since in a computational setting, there should be classes (the type) and instance data (the token/instance/individual). Are you're suggesting that the type/universal is a type of abstract entity? Other treatments? _________________________________________________________________ Message Archives: http://ontolog.cim3.net/forum/ontolog-forum/ Config Subscr: 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 join: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?WikiHomePage#nid1J (01) |
Previous by Date: | Re: [ontolog-forum] Spatial Extent of Abstract Entities?, Patrick Cassidy |
---|---|
Next by Date: | Re: [ontolog-forum] Grover Models, doug foxvog |
Previous by Thread: | Re: [ontolog-forum] Spatial Extent of Abstract Entities?, Patrick Cassidy |
Next by Thread: | Re: [ontolog-forum] Spatial Extent of Abstract Entities?, John F Sowa |
Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |