Hi, Karsten and Christian,

Nice "brain pingpong" match ;o)

Don't you think that your vision depends on the feeling you get and the 
tools you are familiar with ?

In a pure object oriented model, dealing with hierarchies of object is natural.

However when it comes to knowledge management, it is more natural to shift 
to predicates, for example semantic networks.
Because it is usually not possible to define THE hierarchy : to keep on 
with the brain, you may succed in building an anatomical hierarchy, but 
when you will consider brain functions or brain diseases, you will have to 
build new hierarchies. All this hierarchical trees are inter-connected, and 
you have better replacing "hierarchical traits" with "named traits" (ie 
predicates).

I don't know if all this is relevant with openEHR ? (I mean does a system 
need to mimic what it should manage)

Regards

Philippe

> > physical brain == carrier of knowledge == neurons, synapses etc. == 
> real world
>But they are not interconnected in a hierarchy only, to the
>best of my knowledge.
>
> > The mind knows about itself and its physical carrier, the brain. But the
> > functioning of the brain has nothing to do with the abstract concepts
> > build within it.
>I tend to think that Nature had no abstract concepts
>"in mind" when "building" the brain. Rather abstract concepts
>are what we with our limited ability to comprehend use to
>reduce complex things to something we *can* understand, no ?
>Eg. the brain simply IS but we use abstract concepts to
>*describe* what we understand of it. Unless you want to reduce
>those abstract concepts to Laws of Nature - which have nothing
>much to do with why or whether the brain is internally connected
>hierarchially or web-like.
>
>Karsten
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