Hi Joel,
As I fellow submitter and strong supporter of the Organism class for DwC, I,
like you, have been uneasy with the cross-reference to OBI:0100026 in the
definition.  It may be appropriate to include this in some sort of
qualifying remarks about the class, but it doesn't seem to be appropriate to
include the reference in the definition.  Even though it is somewhat
softened by the phrase "in the sense" (as opposed to some sort of "same as"
assertion), I would support the removal of the sentence "An organism in the
sense used here is defined as OBI:0100026
(http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0100026)." from the definition of
dwc:Organism.
I still believe that a human-friendly name is very helpful.  The barrier is
not the standard or how it's named.  The barrier is how humans interpret and
implement the standard.  Giving the class an opaque identifier (I would, of
course, vote in favor of a UUID!) would probably create a barrier to
progress through opacity that is greater than the barrier of confusion
through mis-interpretation of an imperfect human-friendly name like
"Organism".
Of course, you didn't even indicate the term that we have been using for
years, and which I prefer, which is "IndividualOrganism".  However, in the
interest of progress, I strongly oppose re-opening the "name" can of worms.
DwC is riddled with mis-applied names of things, and we can still manage to
muddle our way through it (provided the definitions are clear).  For
example, the term "Occurrence" has been used to represent "things" that
range from actual occurrence instances (e.g., observations of organisms at a
place and time), to individual organisms (e.g. specimens as a proxy to the
occurrence of an organism at the time it was extracted from nature), to
evidence (e.g. photographs of organisms), to occurrence-evidence instances
(photographs of organism in nature).  Yet we still manage to exchange data
(perhaps less efficiently than we could).
Anyway, I support the removal of the OBI reference in the definition of
"Occurrence", and I oppose re-visiting the issue of the label we apply to
the proposed new dwc class.
Aloha,
Rich
  
  
    -----Original Message-----
From: tdwg-content-bounces@lists.tdwg.org [mailto:tdwg-content-
bounces@lists.tdwg.org] On Behalf Of joel sachs
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 9:34 AM
To: tdwg-content@lists.tdwg.org
Subject: [tdwg-content] Comments on Darwin Core Issue 205 (the proposed
Organism term)
Everyone,
I'd like to comment on the proposed addition to Darwin Core of an
    
  
  "organism"
  
  
    class (https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=205). I am
    
  
  one of
  
  
    the submitters of this proposal, but I have some
reservations/suggestions/questions about both the definition and the name.
Taking them in turn:
The Definition
The proposed definition is:
"A particular organism or defined group of organisms considered to be
taxonomically homogeneous.  An organism in the sense used here is defined
    
  
  as
  
  
    OBI:0100026 (http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0100026).  Instances of
    
  
  the
  
  
    Organism class are intended to facilitate linking of one or more
    
  
  Identification
  
  
    instances to one or more Occurrence instances.  Therefore, things that are
typically assigned scientific names (such as viruses, hybrids, and
    
  
  lichens) and
  
  
    aggregates whose occurrences are typically recorded (such as packs,
    
  
  clones,
  
  
    and colonies) are included in the scope of this class."
There are a few things to note here:
i. The definition of OBI:0100026 is "A material entity that is an
    
  
  individual living
  
  
    system, such as animal, plant, bacteria or virus, that is capable of
    
  
  replicating or
  
  
    reproducing, growth and maintenance in the right environment. An organism
may be unicellular or made up, like humans, of many billions of cells
    
  
  divided
  
  
    into specialized tissues and organs." This definition is not internally
    
  
  consistent,
  
  
    since it delineates organisms as being either unicellular or
    
  
  multi-cellular, while
  
  
    at the same time explicitly including viruses, which are acellular.
ii. The reference to OBI:0100026 does not add clarity to the DwC
    
  
  definition,
  
  
    since the DwC definition goes on to include the clarifying aspects of the
    
  
  OBI
  
  
    definition (viruses and lichens are organsims), while leaving out the
    
  
  muddying
  
  
    aspects of the OBI definition (organisms are unicellular or
    
  
  multicellular). The
  
  
    DwC definition also extends the the OBI defintion (to include wolf packs).
iii. The rdf definition of OBI:organism inherits axioms from the Basic
    
  
  Formal
  
  
    Ontology (BFO). I've long argued that it's a mistake for TDWG to commit to
    
  
  any
  
  
    particular upper ontology, as there is no consensus upper ontology. (Some
scientific communities use Dolce, some use SUMO, and many have
    
  
  deliberately
  
  
    chosen to use none at all.) In general, I like the notion of Darwin Core
    
  
  as a
  
  
    glossary of terms, on top of which various data models can be built. When
    
  
  we
  
  
    import terms that carry with them an abundance of ontological commitment,
    
  
  it
  
  
    raises the stakes for those who choose to use TDWG vocabularies. (In
    
  
  contrast,
  
  
    when Darwin Core imported "Location"
from Dublin Core, it did so at no cost, since Dublin Core is not tied to
    
  
  any
  
  
    particular upper world-view.)
The Name
There have been multiple debates about a good name for this class, and
    
  
  there
  
  
    was never consensus. (In addition to "Organism", candidates included
"Individual", "OrganismalIndividual", "TaxonIndividualOrGroup",
"OrganismOrTaxonomicallyHomogenousGroupOfOrganisms",
"OccurringThing".) I agree that we're unlikely to agree on a consensus
    
  
  name,
  
  
    but I question why we need a name at all. Although TDWG has traditionally
used transparent identifiers for terms, this has been by convention, and
    
  
  is not a
  
  
    requirement. Is it time to test the "opaque identifier" waters? Are there
potential problems with having a mix of transparent and opaque identifiers
    
  
  in
  
  
    our vocabularies? If not, could we call this class dwc:12345? Should we?
Thoughts on any of the above?
Many thanks,
Joel.
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