Difference between revisions of "Edu:Category"
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# A division within a system of classification. | # A division within a system of classification. | ||
# Any of several fundamental and distinct classes to which entities or concepts belong. Reference: Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary 2004 v.3.1 electronic edition. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/category | # Any of several fundamental and distinct classes to which entities or concepts belong. Reference: Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary 2004 v.3.1 electronic edition. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/category | ||
− | # A formal (which is to say, domain-neutral) [[universal]], such as [[entity]], [[continuant]], or [[occurrent]]. [ [[TermlistReferences#arpetal2015|Arp et al., 2015]] ] | + | # A formal (which is to say, domain-neutral) [[Edu:universal|universal]], such as [[Edu:entity|entity]], [[Edu:continuant|continuant]], or [[Edu:occurrent|occurrent]]. [ [[Edu:TermlistReferences#arpetal2015|Arp et al., 2015]] ] |
− | # A property that is [[ | + | # A property that is [[Edu:Rigidity|rigid]] but does not carry a specific identity criteria. [ [[Edu:TermlistReferences#Guarino1999|Guarino, 1999]] ] |
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Revision as of 02:19, 11 November 2019
Category
- A division within a system of classification.
- Any of several fundamental and distinct classes to which entities or concepts belong. Reference: Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary 2004 v.3.1 electronic edition. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/category
- A formal (which is to say, domain-neutral) universal, such as entity, continuant, or occurrent. [ Arp et al., 2015 ]
- A property that is rigid but does not carry a specific identity criteria. [ Guarino, 1999 ]
extension proposal (FL, 2018-05-15):
- add category as defined in philosophy, as "highest kind of genera", cf. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/categories/
- add category as defined in (mathematical) category theory (e.g., a foundation of the Distributed Ontology Language), cf. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/category-theory/