]> Wittgenstein Archives at the University of Bergen (WAB): Wittgenstein ontology (Work in progress, 2007-).\n \nA first version of WAB's Wittgenstein ontology, exemplifying some of its basic concepts and functions (e.g. interlinking of primary source class instances on the one hand and philosophical subject class instances on the other), was produced by WAB in cooperation with Christian Morbidoni (Philospace/SwickyNotes) and the consortium of the EU funded Discovery project in the period 2006-09. It was developed further within the framework of the NordForsk funded JNU VWAB project (2008-11), the EU funded projects Agora (2011-13) and DM2E (2012-14), and the Norwegian National Library funded project DIGITALE FULLTEKSTARKIV (DF) (2012-13) at the University of Bergen Library. For an early short slides overview of the ontology’s classes and relations and for application samples, see Alois Pichler's presentation http://www.slideshare.net/DM2E/berlin-16161631 (January 2013). \ \n\n \For more information see http://wab.uib.no/wab_philospace.page. Source: A primary or secondary source. Subject: A subject which is neither a source nor a person. Primary Source Primary Source: A primary source for Wittgenstein scholarship, authored or co-authored by Wittgenstein, or if not by Wittgenstein, referred to by Wittgenstein. Secondary Source Secondary source: A secondary source for Wittgenstein scholarship, not authored nor co-authored by Wittgenstein, but referring to Wittgenstein or to a Wittgenstein primary source. Example of instance: MatarAnat_2009; WallgrenThomas_2008 WittgensteinSource Wittgenstein primary source, subclass of Primary source: A primary source for Wittgenstein scholarship, authored or co-authored by Wittgenstein. Person Person: A person, fictive, semi-historical or historical. Example of instance: Socrates; Moses; WittgensteinPaul. WittgensteinExternalSource External primary source, subclass of Primary source: A primary source for Wittgenstein scholarship, not authored or co-authored by Wittgenstein, but referred to in a Wittgenstein primary source. Example of instance: Goethe JWv: Faust; Augustine St: Confessiones. MS MS, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: A Wittgenstein primary source physical item, handwritten. Example of instance: Ms-115; Ms-139a. TS TS, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: A Wittgenstein primary source physical item, typed. Example of instance: Ts-213; Ts-310. Bemerkung Bemerkung, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: Corresponding roughly to a single remark in a Wittgenstein primary source physical item, identified by the Wittgenstein Archives through a “siglum” which is composed of item identifier, page identifier(s) and position identifier(s). Example of instance: Ts-310,21[2]et22[1]. Werk Werk, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: A publication of a Wittgenstein primary source which has become standard, a “work”. Example of instance: W-CV; W-TLP. Part Part Letter Letter Chapter Chapter, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: A single chapter in a Wittgenstein primary source physical item. Example of instance: Ts-213,ch-i. Sentence Sentence, subclass of Wittgenstein Primary source: A single sentence in a Wittgenstein primary source physical item. Example of instance: Ts-310,21[2]et22[1]_1; Ts-310,21[2]et22[1]_2. Field Field, subclass of Subject: A field of philosophical discussion. Has subclasses: Metaphysics; Epistemology a.o. Example of subclass structure: Field > Epistemology > Scepticism > Rule-FollowingScepticism. Date Date, subclass of Subject: A date, either day-exact or estimated date span. Example of instance: 19361105; 19450101-19451231. Place Place, subclass of Subject: A place. Example of instance: Skjolden; Cambridge. Perspective Perspective, subclass of Subject: A philosophical perspective. Has subclasses: APichler_Course_TLP; APichler_Course_PI a.o. Example of subclass structure: Perspective > APichler_Course_TLP > [Instances] contradiction; state_of_affairs. Issue Issue, subclass of Subject: A philosophical issue. Example of instance: philosophy; logical analysis. Point Point, subclass of Subject: A philosophical statement. Example of instance: Logical analysis is essential to philosophy. hasPart hasPart isPartOf isPartOf isWorkPublishedFrom isWorkPublishedFrom isPublishedInWork isPublishedInWork isReferredToIn isReferredToIn isContra isContra isArguedAgainstIn isArguedAgainstIn isPro isPro isArguedForIn isArguedForIn refersTo refersTo hasDate hasDate isDateOf isDateOf discusses Discusses isDiscussedIn isDiscussedIn hasAuthor hasAuthor hasOtherVersion hasOtherVersion