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Applied ontology

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Applied ontology involves the practical application of ontological concepts. This can be exceedingly difficult as ontology is a fairly abstract study. There are two main focuses of applied onotology:

Contents

Applying ontology

The challenge of applying ontology is its emphasis on a world view orthogonal to epistemology. The emphasis is on being rather than doing or knowing. One way that emphasis plays out is in the concept of "speech acts": acts of promising, ordering, apologizing, requesting, inviting or sharing. The study of these acts from an ontological perspective is one of the driving forces behind applied ontology.[1] This can involve concepts championed by ordinary language philosophers like Wittgenstein. Applying ontology can also involve looking at the relationship between a person's world and that person's actions. The context or clearing is highly influenced by the being of the subject or the field of being itself. This view is highly influenced by the philosophy of phenomenology[2], the works of Martin Heidegger, and many others.[3]

Ontological perspectives

Social scientists adopt one of four main ontological approaches:

  • realism - the idea that facts are out there just waiting to be discovered;
  • empiricism - the idea that we can observe the world and evaluate those observations in relation to facts);
  • positivism - which focuses on the observations themselves, attentive more to claims about facts than to facts themselves; and
  • postmodernism - which holds that facts are fluid and elusive, so that we should focus only on our observational claims.

See also

References

  1. ^ Fast Company article on Flores — "The Power of Words"
  2. ^ Phenomenology article
  3. ^ McCarl, Steven R., Zaffron, Steve, Nielsen, Joyce McCarl and Kennedy, Sally Lewis, "The Promise of Philosophy and the Landmark Forum" . Contemporary Philosophy, Vol. XXIII, No. 1 & 2, Jan/Feb & Mar/Apr 2001 or DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.278955 Available at SSRN

External References

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Applied ontology from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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