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Mereotopology: A theory of parts and boundaries

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249 Scopus citations

Abstract

The paper is a contribution to formal ontology. It seeks to use topological means in order to derive ontological laws pertaining to the boundaries and interiors of wholes, to relations of contact and connectedness, to the concepts of surface, point, neighbourhood, and so on. The basis of the theory is mereology, the formal theory of part and whole, a theory which is shown to have a number of advantages, for ontological purposes, over standard treatments of topology in set-theoretic terms. One central goal of the paper is to provide a rigorous formulation of Brentano's thesis to the effect that a boundary can exist as a matter of necessity only as part of a whole of higher dimension of which it is the boundary. It concludes with a brief survey of current applications of mereotopology in areas such as natural-language analysis, geographic information systems, machine vision, naive physics, and database and knowledge engineering.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)287-303
Number of pages17
JournalData and Knowledge Engineering
Volume20
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1996

Keywords

  • Cognitive science
  • Formal ontology
  • Mereology
  • Naive physics
  • Topology

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