- From: Simon Spero <sesuncedu@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:11:35 +0000
- To: Bernard Vatant <bernard.vatant@mondeca.com>
- Cc: Antoine Isaac <aisaac@few.vu.nl>, SKOS <public-esw-thes@w3.org>, SWD WG <public-swd-wg@w3.org>
On Jan 10, 2008, at 10:07 AM, Bernard Vatant wrote: > taxonomy like in the example of Simon, that's OK. If you don't care > about it, because the concepts are much more fuzzy, that's also OK. > I agree with Dan that there is nothing wrong with being wrong, if > you know that you are wrong - as Confucius asserted some time > ago :-) [... > "Shall I teach you about knowledge? What you know, you know, what > you don't know, you don't know. This is true wisdom." ] "There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know we don't know." - Donald Rumsfeld, Neo-Confucian > So let SKOS be strongly agnostic about knowledge representation, in > order to be as clear as possible on the use of SKOS vs OWL, for > example. This is a worthwhile goal, but if that is the case it is better not to use the labels "broader" et. al. from the domain of thesauri to describe relationships with a different semantics. In the CILIP's introductory text on thesaurus construction, Broughton (2006,pp. 120-128) takes great pains to make it clear that hierarchical relationships must be universal to be correct. Of course, I fell asleep due to the Venn diagrams[1] At the very least, there need to be very, very explicit warnings that these labels are being used to denote a different relationship to the identically named thesaural relationships. Simon [1] Who was Venn and his diagrams? Was he the most boring child ever? (upper middle class accent) "Father, I have my foot in your bedroom and also in the hallway. As you can see from my diagram I am not only in the bedroom, I am also in the hallway." "Venn, fuck of out of this house!" "All right, father. But I am outside of the house but my hand is in the window and my foot is in a grapefruit. As you can see from my diagram… (mime of patricide) Father, me and Socrates…both died." -- Eddie Izzard, Circle (http://www.auntiemomo.com/cakeordeath/circletranscript.html )
Received on Thursday, 10 January 2008 13:12:01 UTC