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Ontological

Ontological is an adjective relating to ontology, the branch of philosophy that studies the nature of being, existence, and the organization of reality. The term derives from the Greek ont, being, and logos, study.

In philosophy, ontological questions probe what kinds of things exist, such as objects, properties, events, and

The ontological argument is a family of a priori arguments for the existence of God, historically associated

In information science and artificial intelligence, ontologies are formal, shared vocabularies that specify concepts and the

The term is also used more broadly to describe the purported status of entities within a given

relations,
and
how
they
are
related.
Debates
include
whether
universals
exist
independently
(realism)
or
only
as
names
(nominalism),
and
what
it
means
for
something
to
be.
These
discussions
explore
the
criteria
for
what
entities
must
be
admitted
as
part
of
a
theory
of
the
world
and
how
those
entities
are
categorized.
with
Anselm
and
later
developed
by
Descartes.
It
has
faced
many
objections,
including
Gaunilo's
parody
and
Kant's
claim
that
existence
is
not
a
real
predicate.
Despite
disputes,
the
argument
remains
a
central
reference
point
in
discussions
of
divine
existence
and
the
nature
of
necessity.
relationships
among
them
in
a
domain.
They
support
knowledge
representation,
data
integration,
and
the
semantic
Web
by
clarifying
the
ontological
commitments
of
a
system
and
enabling
interoperability
across
data
sources.
theory
or
framework,
for
example
the
ontological
status
of
abstract
objects,
events,
or
fictional
entities.