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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Web service and Semantic Web
Uche Ogbuji wrote: > As I see it, the SW is all about *not* requiring fixity. I am describing a very particular fixity, viz. agreement on the semantics of referenced items. > As assumptions change, assertions can be added to the graph to reflect this > change. Added, yes. This is what I mean by building upon the 'fixity' (i.e., the shared or agreed semantics) of assertions already in place. This (rather static concept of a) Semantic Web does not anticipate processes which will elaborate new semantics from such pre-existing references within the immediate local environment in which that reference data might participate on a particular occasion. OTOH, a web of services or processes is defined by the sum of the particular, perhaps unique, functionality available at its constituent nodes. One by one, those nodes might individually elaborate--for their own purposes, within their unique contexts--very different semantics from the same referenced data. In my own real world experience, this is what specialized expertise consists of. Conversely, I can think of no vertical market, nor for that matter of any horizontal enterprise comprising individual specialties, where the different users of variously overlapping bits of referenced data agree on a fixed and limited canonical semantics as a precondition to processing it. > Inferencing tools can help automate navigating these changes. Perhaps. My concern is that they appear to do so by first fixing the semantics, and thereby the boundaries of that navigation. > Constraints are always presented in context, which can itself be changed. > etc. Does this mean that the context will (must?) change to accommodate inflexible constraints imposed by the agreed semantics of the references upon which it builds? If so, that is precisely what I argue is the cart-before-the-horse of pre-agreed Semantic Web semantics. Surely the unique context of a instance process is what should determine the specific outcome (i.e., the semantics elaborated from) that process. Respectfully, Walter Perry
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