- From: Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 8 Sep 2022 01:12:10 +1000
- To: paoladimaio10@googlemail.com
- Cc: W3C AIKR CG <public-aikr@w3.org>, public-cogai <public-cogai@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAM1Sok0Cx5heaOtHVoz9tvBx=iR_HFhu64ZpS1kyQu-YHXYfog@mail.gmail.com>
I've been out tonight, so might not be the best idea to distil the complex concept into a single line... but.. are you nothing more than a thing? Should we promote this ideology in academic curriculum materials for all young people - so they know they're place (/rights, essentially) in the world...? Timothy Holborn. Timothy Holborn. On Wed, 7 Sept 2022 at 17:17, Paola Di Maio <paola.dimaio@gmail.com> wrote: > Timothy, I cc the AI KR CG list, because OWL is described as KR > > My understanding (Not an OWL expert myself) is that owl:thing is necessary > due to the choice of OWL being based on logical hierarchy, whreby thing is > an abstraction for the upmost entity in the upmost category > and if it makes you feel better, you could probably mask it with another > label (such as owl:anything) without breaking it > > I dont think there is a case for ditching or breaking OWL, but rather for > understanding itse limitations, there is some good reading pointing to > possible workarounds > You could of course look further and start thinking beyond OWL > > this seems a good read in that direction > > Empowering OWL with Overriding Inheritance, Conflict ... > https://www.aaai.org › Papers › Symposia › Spring > > <https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwjG3dHdjoL6AhW6ilYBHek2AWIQFnoECCMQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.aaai.org%2FPapers%2FSymposia%2FSpring%2F2009%2FSS-09-08%2FSS09-08-013.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3VyQX7GXzZ8mrmiinnvBxa> > PDF > by S Hosain · 2009 · Cited by 9 — ing *multiple* different types of > *inheritance* with overrid- ing, and non-monotonic reasoning > The popularity of OWL for knowledge representation > in the Semantic Web applications makes it an attractive > platform. Although OWL supports some form > of object-oriented features for knowledge structuring > and maintenance, it is significantly weak in capturing > most essential object-oriented features such as single > and multiple inheritance, default class values, methods, > overriding and encapsulation in their true spirits. > It is also weak in extending reasoning support for intelligent > knowledge processing. Such features are becoming > increasingly essential in applications such as > social networks, e-commerce and knowledge rich ontology > for Life Sciences. In this paper, we propose > an extension of OWL toward a more powerful knowledge > structuring language, called OWL++, by supporting > multiple different types of inheritance with overriding, > and non-monotonic reasoning capabilities within > OWL. We demonstrate OWL++’s computability and > implementability by presenting a translational semantics > of OWL++ to OWL, for which we have robust execution > engines while for the reasoning component of > OWL++ we rely on Jena to support rules in OWL. > > Also I hear SHACL could be useful used in conjunction with OWL > https://www.semanticarts.com/shacl-and-owl/ > > There is tons of stuff be the looked up I think, as starting points for > workarounds > and beyond OWL futures > > Let us know if you have the chance of conducting further analysis > and send us a summary of your findings > > PDM > > On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 1:51 PM Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I'm still befuddled as to whether my analysis has merit or if there's >> something basic I'm missing. >> >> I noted a concept sometime ago about "human centric web" or "human >> centric AI", etc. (Early credentials CG work). >> >> Ontology Dev environments like protege use https://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl >> therefore anything modelled after it is a subclass of owl:thing >> >> I started on a personhood ontology >> https://github.com/WebCivics/ontologies/blob/master/personhood.ttl >> >> Yet, now I'm trying to do some modelling for consciousness & various >> aspects relating to human agency, where the idea of structuring it all as a >> subclass of owl:thing, churns my stomach. >> >> I'm thinking about forming a broader upper ontology, and thereafter the >> implications. >> >> I'm also considerate of DIDs, which, from my point of view was always >> about ontologies on DLTs (particularly commons), understanding - making >> tools, isn't necessarily about a particular usecase / implementation >> structure. >> >> So, thinking is; if there's a time to break owl:thing (providing >> diversity) perhaps you hat time is now? >> >> Or am I missing something simple / fundamental, etc. >> >> The underlying consideration is impacted by modalities, whereby there may >> be a lack of diverse options available; if the tools aren't present to do >> it, distorting the wave function, via "things", perhaps unnecessarily / >> impactfully, imo. >> >> Timothy Holborn. >> >>
Received on Wednesday, 7 September 2022 15:13:02 UTC