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Ontology

Ontology is the branch of philosophy that investigates the nature of being, existence, and the basic categories of what exists. It asks what kinds of entities populate the world, how they can be grouped into categories, and how these categories relate to one another. Core topics include substance, properties, relations, time, space, identity, universals versus particulars, and the differences between necessary and contingent existence. Ontology also engages with questions about realism, nominalism, and how best to describe the structure of reality.

Historically, ontology has its roots in ancient Greek philosophy and was developed through medieval scholasticism and

In information science and artificial intelligence, the term ontology has a more technical sense. An ontology

Although the philosophical and practical uses differ, both senses address how beings and their categories are

modern
metaphysics.
In
the
20th
century,
analytic
philosophy
further
refined
ontological
questions,
addressing
issues
such
as
the
nature
of
universals,
the
limits
of
classifying
beings,
and
the
role
of
ontological
commitment
in
theories.
is
a
formal
specification
of
a
shared
conceptualization
for
a
domain.
It
defines
concepts
(classes),
properties
(relations),
and
constraints
(axioms)
and
supports
reasoning
and
interoperability.
Ontologies
are
expressed
in
formal
languages
such
as
OWL
or
RDF
and
are
used
in
knowledge
representation,
data
integration,
semantic
search,
and
natural
language
understanding.
Notable
examples
include
the
Gene
Ontology
in
biology
and
various
medical
or
domain-specific
ontologies.
understood
and
organized.