To: | "[ontolog-forum]" <ontolog-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
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From: | Chris Partridge <partridge.csj@xxxxxxxxx> |
Date: | Tue, 23 Jun 2015 19:21:03 +0100 |
Message-id: | <CAMWD8MprpdnqL_BDxPTjJNdJXXdm8g9fyGDxOcrYrdiTryMX+g@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
"Whether the reconciled views have anything to do with “objective reality” is irrelevant, as is epistemology and ethics. We are not interested in what is true, or what is real, or what is good, we are only interested in capturing the common beliefs of the stakeholders, or just enough of what each believes to make it possible for them to communicate and determine certain consequences." I have a very different picture, based upon practice. In general, the experts I meet are obviously really experts, but seem not to have (or have access to) formal models of their expertise - ditto stakeholders - and, of course, I am not alone in this. And it seems to be in the nature of expertise/stakeholding to hold different views on what exists. The old joke about economists seems to hold of experts when you try to tie down their expertise - put 4 experts in a room and you get 5 opinions. Another way of expressing this is to say that one should always take the first version of a users' requirements with a pinch of skepticism. I remember a graduate student telling me a while ago that some statement must be true as the expert has told them so - apparently this was the approach they had been taught at school. I was a little shocked so, over the years, I have asked fellow system builders what their view was. I have yet to meet one who would not critically review what the experts/users said, and assume that it is probably seriously wrong in a number of ways. It is also worth bearing mind that whether the system is for an aircraft or an ATM that there is a reasonably obvious way the system can fail to work - that seems to be based upon a belief-independent world. If you came across a crashed aircraft, would you take seriously an 'expert' view that said it has not crashed because some stakeholder believes it would not crash in these circumstances? There are many cases of clear 'world-to-word' fit. In this situation, it helps to have some kind of approach that can arbitrate between the world and the variety of views. And objective reality, in so far as you can grasp it, can and does play this role reasonably well. Chris (PS I also disagree with your view on philosophy, but that would take more debate.) On 23 June 2015 at 17:58, Edward Barkmeyer <ebarkmeyer@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
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