Ontology-Derived Architectural Visualizations: A Formal Basis for Eliminating Design-Time Ambiguity in Enterprise Architecture and Business Architecture

This paper argues that architectural visualizations derived entirely from pre-established formal ontologies possess properties - completeness, consistency, traceable coverage, and reproducibility - that design-first visualization methods cannot structurally guarantee. Enterprise architecture and business architecture practice today relies overwhelmingly on design-first methods, in which the practitioner selects diagram content, assigns labels, and determines scope at the moment of drawing. Two frameworks in the field, the Open Group’s TOGAF® and the Business Architecture Guild’s BIZBOK® Guide, both operate on this design-first assumption. This paper demonstrates, through a controlled pedagogical exercise, that an alternative is both feasible and empirically verifiable: a methodology, developed in the Enterprise Architecture Center Of Excellence™ (EACOE™) and Business Architecture Center Of Excellence™ (BACOE™) frameworks, in which every element of a visualization must be traceable to a formally defined ontological entry established before any drawing begins.

 
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