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Revision as of 17:14, 19 October 2001

Concept A is a generalization of concept B if and only if:

  • every instance of concept B is also an instance of concept A; and
  • there are instances of concept A which are not instances of concept B.


Equivalently, A is a generalization of B iff B is a specialization of A.


For instance, 'Animal' is a generalization of 'Bird' because every bird

is an animal, and there are animals which are not birds (humans, for

instance).


The term "generalization" has a meaning in logic; where does the above come from, Seb? --LMS