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:The second video presents a view of how BFO functions as a support for its users.
:The second video presents a view of how BFO functions as a support for its users.


==Week 9 (March 25): [https://youtu.be/-OUr0tuFloM Relatively isolated systems]
==Week 9 (March 25): [https://youtu.be/-OUr0tuFloM Relatively isolated systems]==
:Ingarden's work on ontology is one of the principal sources motivating the creation of BFO.
:Ingarden's work on ontology is one of the principal sources motivating the creation of BFO. We here present Ingarden's work on systems of different types.


==Week 10 (April 1) [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0masZPGLb0 ISO/IEC 21838]==
==Week 10 (April 1) [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0masZPGLb0 ISO/IEC 21838]==

Revision as of 15:15, 8 February 2026

PHI 598LEC Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology

Spring 2026

Faculty: Dr. Barry Smith

ONLINE, HYBRID, TWO CREDIT COURSE

This course will present an introduction to Basic Formal Ontology (BFO), which is a widely used top-level ontology, approved in 2021 as international standard ISO/IEC 21838-2. The course is divided into an asynchronous and a synchronous part, as follows:

The asynchronous part

This will consists of a series of videos listed in week-by-week order below. (The complete list will be made available soon.) Typically I will present suggestions for background reading which might be of assistance in absorbing the content of these videos. Where students have comments or questions relating to a specific video, comments which they believe will be of general interest to other students in the class, these should be submitted to the Teams channel (to be established), where Dr Smith will provide responses. More specific questions, for example about logistics, can be emailed to Dr Smith at ifomis@gmail.com.

You will find further treatment of many of the issues addressed in the videos in the BFO textbook, which is listed under Background Reading below.

Note that questions and all other contributions, whether communicated through zoom meetings, emails or via Teams, will form part of the material used for grading this class.

The synchronous part

This will consist of practical work by students, either working alone or (preferably) as members of teams. The results of this work will then be communicated through a series of zoom meetings, supplemented by associated discussions on our Slack channel.

Students will participate in working sessions designed to lead to the creation of online content -- essays, videos, articles, ... -- for example summarizing (or criticizing) aspects of BFO or describing how BFO can be used in specific areas, or reviewing what results when LLMs are used in BFO coding, or how BFO helps you solve a problem at work. Ideally the content should be suitable for distribution to a wider audience. These working sessions will involve teams, which will be put together in the early weeks of the class with the aid of Elena Miliventi, who is my research assistant (and also a student in this glass). It is hoped that one team will address the charges made against BFO in the paper BFO Expert Coding Challenge (perhaps considering also the Citations to this paper). Other ideas are: a series of tiktok videos or LinkedIn contributions presenting key aspects of BFO; articles intended for publication; projects demonstrating the utility of BFO e.g. for solving problems you face at work, proposals to improve BFO, and so on. Here creativity will contribute to your grade for this class.

For those students who have a suitable project which they wish to realize on their own, regular meetings with Dr Smith and/or with Ms Miliventi will be organized.

Working sessions are tentatively scheduled to take place from 7-8pm on dates to be announced.

Week 1 (January 21): Inaugural session

Week 2 (January 28): Basic Formal Ontology 101

This is an introduction to building ontologies with BFO, with special reference to the rules for deciding whether a given general term designates a universal.

Week 3 (February 4): BFO Tutorial (2019): A series of 6 Videos

This is a survey of main features of BFO itself in the form of a series of short tutorials. It deals with BFO 2.0, which differs slightly from BFO 2020, which is the most current version. However the differences relate not to BFO itself, but rather to the new First Order Logic axiomatization of BFO, which was introduced with the ISO standard. Details (for those who are interested in such matters) can be found here: https://ncorwiki.buffalo.edu/index.php/BFO_Release_History.

Week 4 (February 11): Basic Formal Ontology Tutorial

This is a presentation to an audience of engineers at a meeting of the Industrial Ontologies Foundry. It contains examples of what happens when people argue about BFO. BFO is a realist ontology, which means that all terms of BFO are intended to refer to something that exist. How, then, do we provide a BFO-conformant treatment of the work of an industrial designer, at the point where the object he is designing does not yet exist?

Week 5 (February 18): The Ontology of Science

Focuses on the Focuses on the ontology of biology, and on the issue of multi-level ontology -- from molecules to cells to organisms, and from functions at the molecular level to downstream biological processes. BFO claims to be a multi-perspectival ontology, and in particular a multi-granularity ontology, which can work on each of these levels.

Week 6 (February 25): Aboutness and Language

BFO does not contain terms relating to information entities such as words or mathematical equations or poems. Instead it draws on the category of generically dependent continuants (GDCs), which then forms the starting point of the Information Artifact Ontology. Information artifacts are GDCs which are about something.

Week 7 (March 4): Ontology of Terrorism

Acts of terrorism are often described in terms of "sending a message" (for example to a government) through violence or threats of violence. We present the beginnings of an ontology of terrorism on this basis, drawing on the theory of speech acts but also on a more general theory of language according to which a language is a set of capabilities associated with a set of behaviors.

Week 8 (March 11): Capabilities (2022); BFO and DOLCE

The first of these two videos proposes a definition of capability as a universal falling between function and disposition as the latter are defined in Basic Formal Ontology (BFO). Capabilities are like functions in that they can be evaluated on the basis of how well they are realized. They differ from functions in that they are not the rationale for the existence of their bearers. Thus, a water pump may have, in addition to its function of pumping water, many capabilities including: to be weatherproof, to run without lubricant, and so forth. We argue, that all functions are capabilities, but not all capabilities are functions, and we develop a series of axioms to distinguish capabilities formally from both dispositions and functions. We provide examples of the use of capability in a variety of domains, focusing on a definition of language as a capability of persons.
The second video presents a view of how BFO functions as a support for its users.

Week 9 (March 25): Relatively isolated systems

Ingarden's work on ontology is one of the principal sources motivating the creation of BFO. We here present Ingarden's work on systems of different types.

Week 10 (April 1) ISO/IEC 21838

This is the top-level ontology / BFO standard

Week 11 (April 8) JOWO Part 1, Part 2, Temporalized Relations

Begins with a 2-part video of a tutorial presented at the JOWO (Joint Ontologies Workshops). Part 1 introduces BFO to a technical audience. Part 2 provides a brief exposition of the rationale for including temporalized relations in the OWL specification of BFO 2020 (ISO/IEC 21838:2). Since OWL can accommodate only two-place relations, and since the de facto standard formalization of BFO uses OWL, there is a need for strategies to capture the temporal dimensions of general assertions such as "Milk teeth are lost as children grow" or "Thermally heated machines are inspected every 6 months." The third video provides an attempt at a simplified exposition of the issues involved.

Week 12 (April 15) Sites, Boundaries, Qualities, Objects, Qualities, Dispositions, Diseases, Why Most Ontologies Fail

Week 13 (April 22) Synchronous Question-Answer Session 1

Week 14 (April 29) Synchronous Question-Answer Session 2

Material for the course will be based on the following BFO tutorials, supplemented by documentation of more recent developments:

Revised versions of this tutorial material will be divided into 12 single-hour lectures, which will be made available asynchronously. The lectures will form part of the basis for synchronous working sessions, in which students will be divided into teams. Each month all students will give presentations on the results of their work thus far. The final two weeks will be devoted to question-answer sessions.

Grading

Students will be graded on the basis of:

1. questions (and answers) assembled by students over the course of the semest​er
For each video, the student should prepare exactly one single-sentence question relating to the content of this video, together with a 1-paragraph answer to this question. The answer should not be contained in the video content for this class. All questions and answers should be sent in a single email to ifomis@gmail.com on April 30.
2. interactions and results of the synchronous phase
Dr Smith and Ms Milivinti will keep track of your interactions in support of your creative work during the course of the semester. Dr Smith will evaluate this content and also results of your work. Features to be graded will include: creativity, quantity of your contributions, success of your project(s).

Both 1. and 2. determine 50% of the total grade. Where team work is graded members of teams will receive equal grades.

Background reading

ISO standard

Grokipedia on Basic Formal Ontology

Awesome BFO

[1] R. Arp, B. Smith, A. Spear, Building Ontologies with Basic Formal Ontology, Cambridge MA: MIT Press (2015).

[2] Jansen, Ludger, and Barry Smith. "Categories in Top-Level Ontologies: Revisiting the Aristotelian Background," Advances in Knowledge Representation, 5(3) (2025).

[3] Peter M. Simons, "Against Set Theory", in: Experience and Analysis, Vienna: HPT&ÖBV, 143-152 (2005).

[4] Barry Smith, "Beyond concepts: ontology as reality representation," in: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Formal Ontology in Information Systems (FOIS 2004), 73-84. Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2004.

# Video Title Duration YouTube Link
6 The Ontology of (Supply Chain) Services 11:35 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1Zlunh3eMw
7 Industrial Ontologies Foundry (2022) 7:52 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pfsimHTApU
8 Ontology of (Social) Services 10:38 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qrwWAISrC8
9 Ontology Foundries 20:51 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFiwmq7f4wQ
14 Reasoning with the Information Artifact Ontology 7:47 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTx_rRWmTqE
17 What problem with OWL is BFO-2020 trying to solve 28:04 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDs7Pthdows
29 BFO Tutorial (2019). Part 1: Introduction to BFO ISO 41:11 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muafRW0bXgw
30 Basic Formal Ontology Applied to the Ontology of Language. With a coda on the Turing Test 39:42 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3btP1InPZY
31 IOF: Draft BFO Formalization Proposal. 1-25-2019 31:06 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJgE-O2iREM
36 How BFO Deals with Data from Multiple Contexts 16:31 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K9AsCDBRJpM
37 Why Do We Need Upper-Level Ontologies? 20:47 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjf9zeCh_Sw
38 Relationships between upper-level ontologies 1:02:25 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJxfZ3cq5jE
39 Functions, Dispositions and Capabilities (2017) 31:15 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIPg2bGJSzE
40 Are there Capabilities on Mars? 1:30:51 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lo7iPP2wKgw
41 Introduction to BFO and to the Industrial Ontologies Foundry 47:16 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ4uW7PK5cI
42 Building Ontologies: An Introduction for Engineers (Part 2) 53:01 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vdUUhF4JdE
43 Building Ontologies: An Introduction for Engineers (Part 1) 51:30 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDARyJBvnuc
44 Building Ontologies: An Introduction for Engineers (Part 2) 1:44:30 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gh0f2Us0hr0
45 Building Ontologies: An Introduction for Engineers (Part 1) 54:17 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTNQYyh88-Y
46 Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology (2015): Part One 7:48 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMCBON2me3Y
47 Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology (2015): Part Two 1:44:29 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGPVCkuKTo4
48 Tutorial: Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology 2.0 (2015) 54:16 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yl6_M1sQEAQ
49 Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) 2012 7:14 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FjOgoKvNNMM (BAD QUALITY)
50 Part1: Changes in BFO 2.0, by BarrySmith N/A N/A
51 Aboutness 21:44 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBKsupBquok