Towards a Formal Ontology of Information. Selected Ideas of K. Turek Cover Image

Towards a Formal Ontology of Information. Selected Ideas of K. Turek
Towards a Formal Ontology of Information. Selected Ideas of K. Turek

Author(s): Roman Krzanowski
Subject(s): Philosophy, Metaphysics, Special Branches of Philosophy, Philosophy of Science, Ontology
Published by: Copernicus Center Press
Keywords: information; formal ontology of information; set theory; form-matter complex; substance; structures; relations

Summary/Abstract: There are many ontologies of the world or of specific phenomena such as time, matter, space, and quantum mechanics1. However, ontologies of information are rather rare. One of the reasons behind this is that information is most frequently associated with communication and computing, and not with ‘the furniture of the world’. But what would be the nature of an ontology of information? For it to be of significant import it should be amenable to formalization in a logico-grammatical formalism. A candidate ontology satisfying such a requirement can be found in some of the ideas of K. Turek, presented in this paper. Turek outlines the ontology of information conceived of as a part of nature, and provides the ‘missing link’ to the Z axiomatic set theory, offering a proposal for developing a formal ontology of information both in its philosophical and logicogrammatical representations.

  • Issue Year: 2016
  • Issue No: 61
  • Page Range: 23-52
  • Page Count: 30
  • Language: English