Meaning Holism and Indeterminacy of Reference in Ontologies (Extended Abstract)
Abstract
According to meaning holism, the meanings of all the words in a language are interdependent. If this was true, then the very practice of building largely interconnected set of ontologies would be threatened. We examine here the extent of the severity of meaning holism for ontology engineering, based on a definition of the meaning of a class term in an ontology, with regard to the classical analytic/synthetic distinction. We show that meaning holism is not as pervasive in ontologies as traditionally assumed in philosophy of language when interpreting the meaning of a class term as a collection of statements expressing necessary conditions on this term. Still, meaning holism presents substantial challenges for ontology engineering and requires mitigation strategies. We also investigate the related phenomenon of indeterminacy of reference and show how anchoring formal ontologies in natural language can mitigate this problem, even if not fully control it.
Cite
Text
Barton et al. "Meaning Holism and Indeterminacy of Reference in Ontologies (Extended Abstract)." International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2025. doi:10.24963/IJCAI.2025/1206Markdown
[Barton et al. "Meaning Holism and Indeterminacy of Reference in Ontologies (Extended Abstract)." International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2025.](https://mlanthology.org/ijcai/2025/barton2025ijcai-meaning/) doi:10.24963/IJCAI.2025/1206BibTeX
@inproceedings{barton2025ijcai-meaning,
title = {{Meaning Holism and Indeterminacy of Reference in Ontologies (Extended Abstract)}},
author = {Barton, Adrien and Fabry, Paul and Ethier, Jean-François},
booktitle = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
year = {2025},
pages = {10864-10868},
doi = {10.24963/IJCAI.2025/1206},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/ijcai/2025/barton2025ijcai-meaning/}
}