CommonCoreOntologies icon indicating copy to clipboard operation
CommonCoreOntologies copied to clipboard

sends and receives object properties

Open cameronmore opened this issue 1 year ago • 2 comments

I have a few thoughts about these properties, and I would like to hear others' thoughts as well.

  1. Sending and receiving seem be more broad than just communication messages--sending and receiving packages, mail, supplies, and so on. I think what unites these phenomena is the intentional, directed movement of material entities to a pre-known destination.
  2. It is not clear to me what it means to send an information content entity. ICEs are always borne by some material--whether it's a computer, piece of paper, portion of the brain, or sound waves through the air. To send an ICE sounds like some more complicated process involving the movement or change of some material substrate. The definitions make reference to 'encoding' and 'decoding' ICEs, but something more complicated seems to be going on. There is the production of the ICE, then the concretizing of it in some material bearer, and then there is the physical movement or distribution of that bearer.
  3. Sending and receiving are in themselves processes that should not be collapsed. I can send a letter or a message and it may never reach its destination, similarly with speaking and hearing. Do these warrant their own acts? Act of Sending? Act of Receiving?

Perhaps it's a labeling issue, but since sends/receives are tied to processes of communication, it is more difficult to coin labels for supply chain processes since sending and receiving themselves are very general in natural language.

cameronmore avatar Jul 05 '24 20:07 cameronmore