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1 SNAP and SPAN Barry Smith and Pierre Grenon University at Buffalo and ifomis.de University of Leipzig
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2 Fourdimensionalism – time is just another dimension, analogous to the three spatial dimensions – only processes exist – substances are analyzed away as worms/fibers within the four- dimensional process plenum
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3 There are no substances Bill Clinton does not exist Rather: there exists within the four- dimensional plenum a continuous succession of processes which are similar in Billclintonizing way
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4 Parts of processes (1) c c: boundary a a a: scattered part b b: temporal slice
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5 Parts of processes (2) a a: sub-process b b: phase
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6 There is no change That the water boils means: Not: the water is colder at one time and hotter at another time Rather: that one phase of the boiling process is cold and another hot as one part of a colored ribbon is red and another blue
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7 The Parable of Little Tommy’s Christmas Present
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8 Reductionism 1.a sort of adolescent rebellion 2.a product of physics envy 3.we must simplify reality for the sake of the software
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9 Confession Some of my best friends are fourdimensionalists Fourdimensionalism is right in everything it says But incomplete
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10 Realist Perspectivalism There is a multiplicity of ontological perspectives on reality, all equally veridical = transparent to reality e.g. perspectives at different granularities
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11 Need for different perspectives Not one ontology, but a multiplicity of complementary ontologies Cf. Quantum mechanics: particle vs. wave ontologies
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12 Two Orthogonal, Complementary Perspectives SNAP and SPAN
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13 Substances and processes exist in time in different ways substance t i m e process
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14 Snapshot Video ontology ontology substance t i m e process
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15 SNAP and SPAN Substances and processes Continuants and occurrents In preparing an inventory of reality we keep track of these two different categories of entities in two different ways
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16 SNAP and SPAN stocks and flows commodities and services product and process anatomy and physiology
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17 SNAP and SPAN lobster and growth nation and history population and migration ocean and tide
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18 SNAP and SPAN SNAP entities - have continuous existence in time - preserve their identity through change - exist in toto if they exist at all SPAN entities - have temporal parts - unfold themselves phase by phase - exist only in their phases/stages
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19 SNAP vs. SPAN 1.SNAP: a SNAPshot ontology of endurants existing at a time 2.SPAN: a four-dimensionalist ontology of processes
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20 SNAP vs. SPAN Substances vs. their lives
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21 You are a substance Your life is a process You are 3-dimensional Your life is 4-dimensional
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22 Change Adding SNAP to the fourdimensionalist perspective makes it possible to recognize the existence of change (SNAP entities are that which endure, providing identity through change) SNAP also provides a perspective point from which SPAN processes can be apprehended as changes
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23 Substances do not have temporal parts The first 5-minute phase of my existence is not a temporal part of me It is a temporal part of that complex process which is my life
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24 How do you know whether an entity is SNAP or SPAN?
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25 Three kinds of SNAP entities 1.Substances 2.SPQR… entities 3.Spatial regions, contexts, niches, environments
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26 SPQR… entities States, powers, qualities, roles …
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27 Other SPQR… entities: functions, dispositions, plans, shapes SPQR… entities are all dependent on substances relations
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28 Spatial regions, niches, environments Organisms evolve into environments Island biogeography Atomic physics Cell biology
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29 each SNAP section through reality includes everything which exists at the corresponding now
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30 Many SNAP Ontologies t1t1 t3t3 t2t2 here time exists outside the ontology, as an index or time-stamp
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31 The SPAN Ontology t i m e
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32 here time exists as part of the domain of the ontology The SPAN ontology
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33 SNAP ontology many sharp boundaries SPAN ontology many smeered boundaries
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34 SNAP entities provide the principles of individuation/segmentation for SPAN entities No change without some THING or QUALITY which changes identity-based change research
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35 Ontology of War need both continuants (army, battle- group, materiel, morale, readiness, battlespace …) and occurrents (manoeuvre, campaign, supply, trajectory, death …)
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36 t i m e invasion Battalion moves from A to B
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37 Each is a window on that dimension of reality which is visible through the given ontology ( … Patrick Hayes … ) SNAP and SPAN ontologies are partial only (Realist perspectivalism)
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38 SNAP: Entities existing in toto at a time
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39 Three kinds of SNAP entities 1.Substances 2.SPQR… entities 3.Spatial regions, Contexts, Niches
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42 SNAP
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43 SPAN: Entities extended in time
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44 SPAN: Entities extended in time
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45 SPAN: Entities extended in time
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46 3-dimensional and 4- dimensional environments Lobsters have evolved into environments marked by cyclical patterns of temperature change
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47 Relations between SNAP and SPAN SNAP-entities participate in processes; they have lives, histories.
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48 SPQR… entities and their SPAN realizations the expression of a function the exercise of a role the execution of a plan the realization of a disposition the application of a therapy the course of a disease
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49 SPQR… entities and their SPAN realizations function role plan disposition therapy disease SNAP
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50 SPQR… entities and their SPAN realizations expression exercise execution realization application course SPAN
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51 instruction and operation score and performance
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52 SNAP entities provide the principles of individuation for SPAN entities
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53 Participation x y substances x, y participate in process B time B x y SNAP-t i. time SPAN B
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54 Movement from location x ends begins movement to location y
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55 Creation t1 R SNAP-t 1 t2>t1 R SNAP-t 2 process P initiates a, a's birth at t2 a's life overlaps process P
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56 Granularity spatial regionsubstance parts of substances are always substances
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57 Granularity spatial regionsubstance parts of spatial regions are always spatial regions
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58 Granularity process parts of processes are always processes
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59 MORAL Relations crossing the SNAP/SPAN border are never part-relations
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60 Relations crossing the SNAP/SPAN border are never part-relations John’s life substance John physiological processes sustaining in existence
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61 An adequate ontology of geography has to have three components: SNAP GeO SPAN GeO FIELD GeO
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62 GeO
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63 SNAP GeO
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64 SPAN GeO
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65 FIELD GeO
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66 problem cases traffic jam forest fire hurricane Maria waves shadows
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