Ontology 101: Difference between revisions
From NCOR Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
:Ontology illustration | |||
:Top-Level Ontology and hub-spokes approach | :Top-Level Ontology and hub-spokes approach | ||
:universal / instance | :universal / instance | ||
:ICE | :mass nouns | ||
:GDC, ICE | |||
:dependence | :dependence | ||
:dispositions and qualities | :dispositions and qualities | ||
:roles | :roles | ||
:the all-some rule | :the all-some rule | ||
:single inheritance | |||
:the Aristotle definition of substance rule | |||
:the universal quantification rule (why you can't say 'Tylenol pill' is a 'pill which cures headache') | :the universal quantification rule (why you can't say 'Tylenol pill' is a 'pill which cures headache') | ||
:the no-multiple-inheritance rule (asserted vs. inferred) | :the no-multiple-inheritance rule (asserted vs. inferred) | ||
:BFO+ | :BFO+ | ||
Line 13: | Line 16: | ||
::stasis | ::stasis | ||
::process profile | ::process profile | ||
::system |
Revision as of 15:46, 16 August 2024
- Ontology illustration
- Top-Level Ontology and hub-spokes approach
- universal / instance
- mass nouns
- GDC, ICE
- dependence
- dispositions and qualities
- roles
- the all-some rule
- single inheritance
- the Aristotle definition of substance rule
- the universal quantification rule (why you can't say 'Tylenol pill' is a 'pill which cures headache')
- the no-multiple-inheritance rule (asserted vs. inferred)
- BFO+
- capability
- stasis
- process profile
- system