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tipologia

Tipologia, or typology in English, denotes a systematic approach to classifying phenomena into types that share salient features. The term originates from Greek typos and -logia and has become a general concept across the humanities and sciences for organizing variation in a structured way, without enforcing a single universal model.

It is distinct from taxonomy; typology emphasizes form, function, and patterns of variation rather than fixed

Fields of use include linguistic typology, which compares languages to describe universal tendencies and cross-linguistic variation;

Methodology typically involves defining evaluative criteria, collecting representative samples, coding features, and iterating typological schemes to

Limitations include the risk of oversimplification or the imposition of categories not present in data, and

hierarchical
ranks.
Typologies
are
often
exploratory
or
comparative
tools
used
to
generate
hypotheses
about
processes
and
relationships,
while
taxonomies
classify
entities
into
hierarchies.
archaeological
typology,
which
groups
artifacts
by
form,
technique,
or
stylistic
attributes
to
interpret
chronology
and
cultural
interactions;
architectural
and
urban
typology,
which
classifies
buildings
and
spaces
by
plan
and
function;
and
data
science,
where
typologies
categorize
users
or
systems
to
support
analysis.
Typology
is
also
employed
in
sociology,
anthropology,
and
other
disciplines
to
organize
complex
cultural
and
social
phenomena.
ensure
consistency
and
explanatory
value.
Typologies
are
often
provisional
and
revised
as
new
evidence
emerges.
the
dependence
on
chosen
criteria
and
scale.
When
used
carefully,
typology
helps
manage
complexity
by
highlighting
regularities,
variations,
and
potential
relationships
across
phenomena.