Posted on November 26, 2008, 5:15 pm, by rickmurphy, under
complex systems,
description logic,
emergence,
information flow framework,
information sharing,
model theory,
ontology,
peirce,
pellet,
representation,
semantic web,
semantics,
semiotics.
Demonstrates the value of Perice’s semiotics in ontology alignment and unification. It shows that a) OWL SameAs is a degenerate case of using a global semiotic domain ontology based on Peirce’s thirdness or mediation; b) the semiotic domain provides deeper insights into how machine understanding can model human understanding; and c) how to use type inferencing with the Pellet description logic reasoner. There’s much more to be done than what this small example demonstrates. This example is just the beginning of developing a semiotic domain.
Tags:
alignment and unification,
automated ontology mapping,
business enterprise architecture,
category theory,
charles sanders peirce,
common uppoer ontology,
complex systems,
complex systems design principles,
curry howard,
curry-howard correspondence,
curry-howard isomorphism,
dbpedia,
doain ontology,
dod osd,
dublin core metadata initiative,
emergent theory of meaning,
federal enterprise architecture,
freebase,
galois connection,
global ontology,
if-map,
information flow,
information flow framework,
john sowa,
joseph goguen,
linked data,
local ontology,
metaweb,
metaweb freebase,
office of the secretary of defense,
on a new list of categories,
ontology alignment,
ontology mapping,
paradox of standardization,
peirce,
pellet,
pellet description logic reasoner,
pragmaticism,
RDF/OWL,
Robert Kent,
science commons,
semantic conception of truth,
semantic web,
semantic web design principlies,
semantic web linked data,
semantic web type inference,
semiology,
semiotic domain,
semiotics,
shared concept,
sign system,
standardization opposition mediation,
state of the semantic web,
swoop,
tim berners-lee,
triadic relation,
washington dc semantic web meetup 2 Comments |
Read the rest of this entry »
I make available for all to use an OWL ontology of Charles Sander’s Perice’s “On a New List of Categories” under a Creative Commons By license. In this early manuscript (1868), we see the foundations of his semiotics that later matures in MS 478 Sundry Logical Conceptions, MS 450 Nomenclatures and Divisions of Triadic Relations and MS 517 New Elements.