Dictionary Definition
taxonomy
Noun
1 a classification of organisms into groups based
on similarities of structure or origin etc
2 (biology) study of the general principles of
scientific classification
3 practice of classifying plants and animals
according to their presumed natural relationships
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From sc=Grek + sc=Grek, from sc=Grek from sc=Grek.Noun
- In the context of "systematics|uncountable": The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms.
- The classification in a hierarchical system.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
- classification
- rank
- taxon
- domain
- kingdom
- subkingdom
- superphylum
- phylum
- subphylum
- class
- subclass
- infraclass
- superorder
- order
- suborder
- infraorder
- parvorder
- superfamily
- family
- subfamily
- genus
- species
- subspecies
- superregnum
- regnum
- subregnum
- superphylum
- phylum
- subphylum
- classis
- subclassis
- infraclassis
- superordo
- ordo
- subordo
- infraordo
- taxon
- superfamilia
- familia
- subfamilia
Translations
the science of finding, describing, classifying
and naming organisms
- Hungarian: rendszertan, taxonómia
- Japanese: 分類学
- Russian: таксономия
the classification in a hierarchical system
- Hungarian: osztályozás
- Japanese: 分類法
- Russian: систематика
- ttbc Arabic: (at-taʂnīf)
- ttbc Chinese: 分類學, 分类学 (fēnlèi xué)
- ttbc Croatian: taksonomija
- ttbc Dutch: taxonomie
- ttbc French: taxonomie
- ttbc German: Taxonomie
- ttbc Greek: ταξινομία (taksinomia)
- ttbc Icelandic: flokkunarfræði
- ttbc Interlingua: taxinomia
- ttbc Italian: tassonomia
- ttbc Korean: 분류학 (bunryuhak)
- ttbc Latin: taxonomia
- ttbc Persian: (rad-e bandi)
- ttbc Polish: taksonomia
- ttbc Portuguese: taxionomia (parallel forms: taxinomia, taxonomia)
- ttbc Slovenian: taksonomija
- ttbc Slovak: taxonómia
- ttbc Spanish: taxonomía
- ttbc Turkish: sınıflandırma bilimi, taksonomi
Extensive Definition
Taxonomy is the practice and science of classification.
The word comes from the Greek ,
taxis, 'order' + , nomos, 'law' or 'science'. Taxonomies, or
taxonomic schemes, are composed of taxonomic units known as taxa
(singular taxon), or kinds
of things that are arranged frequently in a hierarchical structure,
typically related by subtype-supertype relationships, also called
parent-child relationships. In such a subtype-supertype
relationship the subtype kind of thing has by definition the same
constraints as the supertype kind of thing plus one or more
additional constraints. For example, car is a subtype of vehicle.
So any car is also a vehicle, but not every vehicle is a car.
Therefore, a thing needs to satisfy more constraints to be a car
than to be a vehicle.
Applications
Originally the term taxonomy referred to the classifying of living organisms like cats (now known as alpha taxonomy); however, the term is now applied in a wider, more general sense and now may refer to a classification of things, as well as to the principles underlying such a classification.Almost anything — animate objects,
inanimate objects, places, concepts, events, properties, and
relationships — may be classified according to some
taxonomic scheme.
The term taxonomy may also apply to relationship
schemes other than parent-child hierarchies, such as network
structures with other types of relationships. Taxonomies may
include single children with multi-parents, for example, "Car"
might appear with both parents "Vehicle" and "Steel Mechanisms"; to
some however, this merely means that 'car' is a part of several
different taxonomies.
A taxonomy might also be a simple organization of
kinds of things into groups, or even an alphabetical list. However,
the term vocabulary is more appropriate for such a list. In current
usage within "Knowledge
Management", taxonomies are seen as less broad than
ontologies as ontologies apply a larger variety of relation
types.
Mathematically, a hierarchical taxonomy is a
tree
structure of classifications for a given set of objects. It is
also named Containment
hierarchy. At the top of this structure is a single
classification, the root node, that applies to all objects. Nodes
below this root are more specific classifications that apply to
subsets of the total set of classified objects. So for instance, in
common schemes of scientific
classification of organisms, the root is called "Organism" followed
by nodes for the taxonomic
ranks: Domain,
kingdom,
phylum,
class,
etc.
Taxonomy and mental classification
Some have argued that the human mind naturally organizes its knowledge of the world into such systems. This view is often based on the epistemology of Immanuel Kant. Anthropologists have observed that taxonomies are generally embedded in local cultural and social systems, and serve various social functions. Perhaps the most well-known and influential study of folk taxonomies is Émile Durkheim's The Elementary Forms of Religious Life.Various taxonomies
In phylogenetic
taxonomy (or cladistic taxonomy), organisms are classified into
clades, which are
discovered by grouping taxa using derived traits. By using clades
as the criteria for separation, cladistic taxonomy, using cladograms, can categorize
taxa into unranked groups.
In numerical
taxonomy or taximetrics, the field of
solving or best-fitting of numerical equations that characterize
all measurable quantities of a set of objects is called cluster
analysis.
Non-scientific taxonomy
Other taxonomies, such as those analyzed by
Durkheim and Lévi-Strauss, are sometimes called folk
taxonomies to distinguish them from scientific taxonomies that
claim to be disembedded from social relations and thus objective
and universal.
The neologism folksonomy should not be
confused with "folk taxonomy" (though it is obviously a contraction
of the two words). Those who support scientific taxonomies have
recently criticized folksonomies by dubbing them "fauxonomies"
(French word "faux" means "false").
The phrase "enterprise
taxonomy" is used in business to describe a very limited form
of taxonomy used only within one organization. An example would be
a certain method of classifying trees as "Type A", "Type B" and
"Type C" used only by a certain lumber company for categorising log
shipments.
See also
- Bloom's Taxonomy
- Carolus Linnaeus, the father of systematics
- Categorization
- Celestial Emporium of Benevolent Recognition, a fictional Chinese encyclopedia with an "impossible" taxonomic scheme.
- Cladistics, the most prominent of several forms of phylogenetic systematics
- Folksonomy
- Gellish English dictionary / Taxonomy, in which the concepts are arranged as a subtype-supertype hierarchy.
- History of plant systematics
- Hypernym
- Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
- Knowledge representation
- Linnaean taxonomy
- Nosology
- Phylogenetic Carl Woese demonstrates a new Taxon method to show evolution via chromosomal methods.
- Ontology
- Scientific classification
- SOLO Taxonomy
- Species problem
- Systematics
External links
- Hjørland: Scientific classification and taxonomy. IN: The epistemological Lifeboat
- Utter freedom via tagging and social constructs
- Wikispecies Main Page
- Integrated Taxonomic Information System
- Taxonomy Browser of National Center for Biotechnology Information
- Library of Taxonomy Resources
- Metadata? Thesauri? Taxonomies? Topic Maps! - Making sense of it all
taxonomy in Arabic: علم التصنيف
taxonomy in Bosnian: Taksonomija
taxonomy in Breton: Taksinomiezh
taxonomy in Bulgarian: Таксономия
taxonomy in Catalan: Taxonomia
taxonomy in Czech: Taxonomie
taxonomy in Danish: Taksonomi
taxonomy in German: Taxonomie
taxonomy in Estonian: Taksonoomia
taxonomy in Modern Greek (1453-): Συστηματική
ταξινόμηση
taxonomy in Spanish: Taxonomía
taxonomy in Esperanto: Taksonomio
taxonomy in French: Taxinomie
taxonomy in Western Frisian: Taksonomy
taxonomy in Galician: Taxonomía
taxonomy in Korean: 분류학
taxonomy in Croatian: Taksonomija
taxonomy in Indonesian: Taksonomi
taxonomy in Italian: Tassonomia
taxonomy in Hebrew: טקסונומיה
taxonomy in Latin: Taxinomia
taxonomy in Lithuanian: Taksonomija
taxonomy in Ligurian: Taxonomïa
taxonomy in Limburgan: Taxonomie
taxonomy in Hungarian: Rendszertan
taxonomy in Malay (macrolanguage):
Taksonomi
taxonomy in Dutch: Taxonomie
taxonomy in Japanese: 分類学
taxonomy in Norwegian: Taksonomi
taxonomy in Occitan (post 1500): Taxinomia
taxonomy in Polish: Taksonomia
taxonomy in Portuguese: Taxonomia
taxonomy in Romanian: Taxonomie
taxonomy in Russian: Таксономия
taxonomy in Sicilian: Tassinumìa
taxonomy in Simple English: Taxonomy
taxonomy in Slovak: Taxonómia (biológia)
taxonomy in Slovenian: Taksonomija
taxonomy in Serbian: Таксономија
taxonomy in Serbo-Croatian: Taksonomija
taxonomy in Finnish: Taksonomia
taxonomy in Swedish: Taxonomi
taxonomy in Thai: อนุกรมวิธาน
taxonomy in Vietnamese: Phân loại học
taxonomy in Turkish: Taksonomi
taxonomy in Ukrainian: Таксономія
taxonomy in Yiddish: טאקסאנאמיע
taxonomy in Chinese: 分类学
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aerobiology, agrobiology, analysis, anatomy, animal physiology,
anthropology,
antonomasia,
arrangement,
assortment, astrobiology, bacteriology, binomial
nomenclature, biochemics, biochemistry, biochemy, bioecology, biological
science, biology,
biometrics, biometry, bionics, bionomics, biophysics, biosystematics, biosystematy, botany, cataloging, categorization, cell
physiology, class,
classification,
codification,
comparative anatomy, conchology, cryobiology, culling, cybernetics, cytology, division, ecology, electrobiology, embryology, entomology, enzymology, ethnobiology, ethology, exobiology, family, filing, genetics, genus, glossology, gnotobiotics, gradation, grading, grouping, helminthology, herpetology, ichthyology, indexing, kingdom, life science, malacology, mammalogy, microbiology, molecular
biology, nomenclature, onomastics, onomatology, order, orismology, ornithology, pharmacology, phylum, physiology, pigeonholing, place-names,
place-naming, placement, polyonymy, protozoology, radiobiology, ranging, ranking, rating, screening, selection, sifting, sorting, sorting out, species, stratification, subdivision, subordination, systematics, tabulation, taxidermy, terminology, toponymy, triage, trinomialism, typology, virology, xenobiology, zoogeography, zoography, zoology, zoonomy, zoopathology, zoophysics, zootaxy, zootomy