Encylopedia Jr
The Kid's Encyclopedia: A great information resource for kids, schools, and anybody who wants to learn.
Kids: Be sure to check with your parents or teachers before using this or any web site.



Browse by Subject
Browse by Letter


This site is designed to be an encyclopedia for use by kids. Kids and children, please ask your parents or teachers prior to using this site or the internet.







Taxonomy

From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids

For the science of classifying living things, see alpha taxonomy.

Taxonomy (from Greek verb τασσεῖν or tassein = "to classify" and νόμος or nomos = law, science, cf "economy") was once only the science of classifying living organisms (alpha taxonomy), but later the word was applied in a wider sense, and may also refer to either a classification of things, or the principles underlying the classification. Almost anything, animate objects, inanimate objects, places, and events, may be classified according to some taxonomic scheme.

Taxonomies, which are composed of taxonomic units known as taxa (singular taxon), are frequently hierarchical in structure, commonly displaying parent-child relationships.

The term taxonomy may also apply to relationship schemes other than hierarchies, such as network structures. Other 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 part of several different taxonomies. A taxonomy might also be a simple organization of objects into groups, or even an alphabetical list. In current usage within "Knowledge Management", taxonomies are seen as slightly less broad than ontologies.

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 ranks: Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, etc. (more details below).

Contents

[edit] 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. The theories of Kant and Durkheim also influenced Claude Lévi-Strauss, the founder of anthropological structuralism. Lévi-Strauss wrote two important books on taxonomies, Totemism and The Savage Mind.

[edit] Various taxonomies

In alpha taxonomy, as the scientific classification of organisms, the system includes the root called "Organism" (as this applies to all living things, it is implied rather than stated explicitly), followed by the ranks: Domain, Kingdom, Phylum (plural, phyla), Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species, with over 40 various other ranks sometimes inserted, [1] such as subphylum, superorder, subfamily, subtribe, or subspecies to handle complex groups such as insects (more at: scientific classification or Linnaean taxonomy).

In cladistic taxonomy (or cladism or cladistics), life forms or living organisms can be classified by clades, which are based on evolutionary grouping by ancestoral traits. By using clades as the criteria for separation, cladistic taxonomy, using cladograms, can categorize species into other groups besides the ranks of class, order, family, etc. of Linnean 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.

A recent 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.

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.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Citation Help

APA Style: Reference List

Encyclopedia Jr (2007). Taxonomy. Retrieved February 11, 2012, from http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/t/a/x/taxonomy.

MLA Style: Works Cited Page

"Taxonomy." Encyclopedia Jr. 2007. 11 Feb 2012 <http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/t/a/x/taxonomy>.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article taxonomy.


Encyclopedia Jr Home Page  Parents and Teachers  About Encyclopedia Junior 


This site is a product of TSI, Copyright 2012, All Rights Reserved. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use.