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Critical conceptual error #26

@Archilegt

Description

@Archilegt

The following example is conceptually incorrect, at least in the sense of the ICZN:

Example 2: 'Aus bus is a synonym of Bus cus' Start by answering the initial question, one, or two names? Your assertion is the name 'bus' is a synonym of 'cus'. Note the assertion is not "Aus bus" is a synonym of "Bus cus". The relationship between "Aus" and "bus" is itself another assertion. While there are finer levels of granularity using the expression bus http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/NOMEN_0000307 (ICZN Synonym) cus will work. When making an assertion of "synonymy" (in some general sense) the "incorrect" (for lack of a better cross-nomenclature label) name is on the left (i.e. the subject), and the "correct" name is on the right (i.e. the object). NOMEN includes domain and range assertions in its object properties. In this case the instance in the domain (left side of the expression) is classified as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/NOMEN_0000226 (ICZN Invalid).

Incorrect use of terminology, conducing to an incorrect example:
Your assertion is the name 'bus' is a synonym of 'cus'. This is against the Code, because 'bus' and 'cus' are not names, they are specific epithets. One of the most important principles in the Code is the Principle of Binomial Nomenclature. You can model genus and specificEpithet separately if needed, but if you want NOMEN and the examples to be Code compliant (at least with the ICZN) and to not generate confusion, then the example should refer to the relation between actual names, not specific epithets: "The binomen Aus bus is a synonym of Bus cus."

Incorrect direction of synonymy:
The assertion 'Aus bus is a synonym of Bus cus' is direction-neutral and does not reflect which name is incorrect. In natural language, the assertion "Scolopendra cubensis is a synonym of Scolopendra alternans" is true, while the reverse is also true. It is the nature of the priority (another important principle, the Principle of Priority) of each synonym what gives information on "correctedness". In natural language, "Scolopendra alternans is the senior synonym of Scolopendra cubensis". In that sentence, the name on the right (i.e., the object) is invalid (= incorrect) in the sense of the ICZN, while the name on the left is valid (= correct), as opposed to your example.

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