A genus of a definition provides a means by which to specify an
is-a relationship: • A square is a rectangle, which is a quadrilateral, which is a plane figure, which is a... • A square is a rhombus, which is a quadrilateral, which is a plane figure, which is a... • A square is a quadrilateral, which is a plane figure, which is a... • A square is a plane figure, which is a... • A square is a... The non-genus portion of the differentia of a definition provides a means by which to specify a
has-a relationship: • A square has an interior angle that is a right angle. • A square has a straight bounding side. • A square has a... When a system of definitions is constructed with genera and differentiae, the definitions can be thought of as nodes forming a
hierarchy or—more generally—a
directed acyclic graph; a node that has no
predecessor is
a most general definition; each node along a directed path is
more differentiated (or
more derived) than any one of its predecessors, and a node with no
successor is
a most differentiated (or
a most derived) definition. When a definition,
S, is the
tail of each of its successors (that is,
S has at least one successor and each
direct successor of
S is a most differentiated definition), then
S is often called
the species of each of its successors, and each direct successor of
S is often called
an individual (or
an entity) of the species
S; that is, the genus of an individual is synonymously called
the species of that individual. Furthermore, the differentia of an individual is synonymously called
the identity of that individual. For instance, consider the following definition: •
[the] John Smith: a human that has the name 'John Smith'. In this case: • The whole definition is
an individual; that is,
[the] John Smith is an individual. • The genus of
[the] John Smith (which is "a human") may be called synonymously
the species of
[the] John Smith; that is,
[the] John Smith is an individual of the species
[a] human. • The differentia of
[the] John Smith (which is "that has the name 'John Smith'") may be called synonymously
the identity of
[the] John Smith; that is,
[the] John Smith is identified among other individuals of the same species by the fact that
[the] John Smith is the one "that has the name 'John Smith'". As in that example, the identity itself (or some part of it) is often used to refer to the entire individual, a phenomenon that is known in
linguistics as a
pars pro toto synecdoche. ==See also==