One alternative would be XX author *unknow value* with the disputer as a source.
To express uncertainty we could also use a statement which says the author is *one of *<the french painter in the years 1500 minus Leonardo>, and create the appropriate class, although we do not have all the expressive power right now to say that. Basic set operation like "set union" or "set complement in another set" or "disjoint with" could be good for that by the way (unfortunaltely disjoint with has not really been well accepted by community).
2014-05-06 17:18 GMT+02:00 Joe Filceolaire filceolaire@gmail.com:
Having a property with multiple values can mean a number of things:
- All the values are equally valid e.g. because a work has multiple authors
- All values are valid but one is preferred - usually the current value
e.g. when we have population figures back over time or all the kings of Denmark.
- One of the values is shown because it is widely used but is deprecated
because it is wrong e.g. Beethoven born on 17 December 1770 (that his date of baptism so he must have been born a few days earlier).
The case described by Freidrich where we have two (or more values) which are both disputed (because they can't both be right) although one value is more widely supported then this is harder to represent semantically. I would go with adding a 'disputed by' qualifier to BOTH claims and marking the more widely accepted value as 'rank:preferred'
But that is just me
Joe
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