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I just asked (poor sweet)
easterbunny this but it occurs to me I may as well ask y'all..
Does the Semantic Web imply the need for one ontology to rule them all? I can see how you can map/join ontologies that are contiguous and (hopefully) exclusive eg one for mammals and one for invertebrates, so you end up with an ontology of animals? . But supposing you're trying to develop an ontology for tax law? A German lawyer will see different concept, in different orders of precedence, and use different phrases (even after translation) than a UK lawyer or a US lawyer. Can all 3 start working independently on their ontologies and eventually usefully share data in applications, or do they all have to agree an ontology at scratch (which just ain't going to happen?)
This is after lunch with Burkhard the mad German ontologist :-)
In other news, I am off to PloktaPi tomorrow - yay! - on the train, not plane, partly as a compromise with work/life balance; I have great hopes of getting most my essays marked on the train. ( don't tell the AUT ). Getting hair cut a.m. to look bootiful, and have bought lotsa new clothes with mother on Tuesday, some of which may accompany me:-) In particular, I acquired a rather wonderful ecru linen transparent coat thing in Per Una to go over a brown/cream sundress, which I think looks rather Katherine Zeta Jones altogether, for my brother's wedding in JUne -- a pic may follow . Sunday is supposed to be a trip to the revamped tate Modern with
peter_crump and altogether I think I Need a Break and Oh Good I've Got One! (many thanks to
bohemiancoast for putting up with me again..)
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Does the Semantic Web imply the need for one ontology to rule them all? I can see how you can map/join ontologies that are contiguous and (hopefully) exclusive eg one for mammals and one for invertebrates, so you end up with an ontology of animals? . But supposing you're trying to develop an ontology for tax law? A German lawyer will see different concept, in different orders of precedence, and use different phrases (even after translation) than a UK lawyer or a US lawyer. Can all 3 start working independently on their ontologies and eventually usefully share data in applications, or do they all have to agree an ontology at scratch (which just ain't going to happen?)
This is after lunch with Burkhard the mad German ontologist :-)
In other news, I am off to PloktaPi tomorrow - yay! - on the train, not plane, partly as a compromise with work/life balance; I have great hopes of getting most my essays marked on the train. ( don't tell the AUT ). Getting hair cut a.m. to look bootiful, and have bought lotsa new clothes with mother on Tuesday, some of which may accompany me:-) In particular, I acquired a rather wonderful ecru linen transparent coat thing in Per Una to go over a brown/cream sundress, which I think looks rather Katherine Zeta Jones altogether, for my brother's wedding in JUne -- a pic may follow . Sunday is supposed to be a trip to the revamped tate Modern with
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no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 10:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 12:25 pm (UTC)ISTM that in Law, you learn the ontology and then work within that framework. Given a new case, you investigate to see how it best fits, what existing law or judgements apply. You may not stick it in ad-hoc, or create a new category. Because, you know, it's The Law, it is not optional, and you do have to work within it. Ignorance is no excuse. "Common sense" comes second where Law exists (I'm thinking of the common idea that "if my parents give me their house then live for 7 years, they can still live in it but I won't have to pay Inheritance Tax").
In (most) other parts of life, things work the other way around, or maintain a balance between working within ontological strictures and growing new systems.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 01:47 pm (UTC)