Ontology, the most fundamental branch of
metaphysics, is the study of
being or
existence as well as the
basic categories thereof. A
being is anything that can be said to 'be'
in various senses of the word '
be.' '
Be' is a word, like many other words, that
has different senses. So there are different senses of the word "be," and accordingly, one might say, there are different "kinds" of beings, or ways of being. In
Aristotle's phrase, ontology is "the science of being
qua being." The word '
qua' means 'with regard to the aspect of'. So ontology is the science of being with regard to the aspect of being--so it is the study of
beings insofar as they exist. More precisely, ontology concerns determining what
categories of being are fundamental or
irreducible and asks whether, and in what sense, the items in those categories can be said to "be."
Different philosophers make different lists of the fundamental [categories of being]?; and one of the basic questions of ontology is: "Just what are the fundamental categories of being?"
Here are examples of ontological questions?:
- What sort of concept is existence?
- Is it possible to give an account of what it means to say that a physical object exists?
- What are [physical objects]? anyway?
- What are an object's properties? or relations and how are they related to the object itself?
- When does an object go out of existence, as opposed to merely changing??
There are, of course, many more.
Ontological problems and topics
Ontological concepts
The ontological problems par excellence include:
There are, however, very many more ontological problems than these.
See also artificial intelligence for the specialized use of the word ontology: for applications within computers, specifically in an area known as knowledge representation, an ontology is a data structure containing all the relevant entities and their relationships within a domain. Computer programs can then use the ontology for a variety of purposes including inductive reasoning, classification, and a varety problem solving techniques. Typically, ontologies in computers are tied closely with controlled vocabularies.