Relationships
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Instances | abstract | Properties or qualities as distinguished from any particular embodiment of the properties/qualities in a physical medium. Instances of Abstract can be said to exist in the same sense as mathematical objects such as sets and relations, but they cannot exist at a particular place and time without some physical encoding or embodiment. |
| attribute | Qualities which we cannot or choose not to reify into subclasses of. |
| entity | The universal class of individuals. This is the root node of the ontology. |
| normative attribute | A Class containing all of the Attributes that are specific to morality, legality, aesthetics, etiquette, etc. Many of these attributes express a judgement that something ought or ought not to be the case. |
| objective norm | The Class of NormativeAttributes that are associated with an objective criterion for their attribution, i.e. there is broad consensus about the cases where these attributes are applicable. |
| probability attribute | A class containing all of the Attributes relating to objective, qualitative assessments of probability, e.g. Likely and Unlikely. |
| relational attribute | Any Attribute that an Entity has by virtue of a relationship that it bears to another Entity or set of Entities, e.g. SocialRoles and PositionalAttributes. |
Belongs to Class
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