Consensus and Scientific Classification

Knowledge Organization 49 (4):236-256 (2022)
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Abstract

Consensus about a classification is defined as agreement on a set of classes and their relations for us in forming beliefs. While most research on scientific consensus has focused on consensus about a belief as a mark of truth, we highlight the importance of consensus in justifying shared classificatory language. What sort of consensus, if any, is the best basis for communicating and reasoning with scientific classifications? We describe an often-overlooked coordinative role for consensus that leverage agreement on how to disagree such that actors involved can still achieve one or more shared aims even when they do not agree on shared beliefs or categories. Looking forward, we suggest that investigating structures and methods for coordinative consensus provides an important new direction for research on the epistemic foundations of knowledge organization.

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Author Profiles

Joeri Witteveen
University of Copenhagen
Beckett Sterner
Arizona State University

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A plea for epistemic ontologies.Gilles Kassel - 2023 - Applied ontology 18 (4):367-397.

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