The Water Falls but the Waterfall does not Fall: New Perspectives on Objects, Processes and Events
Antony Galton
and
Riichiro Mizoguchi
Applied Ontology, Volume 4 number 2, 2009, pp. 71-107.
Abstract
We challenge the widespread presumption that matter and
objects are ontologically prior to processes and events, and also the
less widespread but increasingly popular view that processes and
events are ontologically prior to matter and objects. Instead we
advance a third view according to which each of these pairs of
categories is ontologically dependent on the other. In particular,
taking a cue from an ontology of devices, we identify the object as an
interface between those processes which are internal to it and those
which are external to it and which it may be said to enact, thereby
linking objects intrinsically to the processes in which they are
involved as well as providing a more powerful determinant of object
identity than more traditional, non-dynamic criteria based on
demarcation from the environment. The internal processes are
themselves external processes in relation to the components of
the object which enact them, leading to a potentially open-ended
recursive decomposition of both objects and processes in a complex web
of mutual interdependency. We also discuss how matter is related to
objects, and processes to events, bringing the four categories
together in a diagram which clarifies the relations between them -
often considered problematic - and establishes a framework for a
highly general top-level ontology.
Full text (preprint)
Antony Galton
Last modified: Mon Mar 29 13:03:56 BST 2010