ABSTRACT

This chapter emphasizes also the following point: contexts are crucial for defining coordinated behaviors between intelligent entities. The difficulty a rises w hen c omputation c ontexts a re required; t hat i s, w hat kind of implementation should one expect from understandable context definitions? A gap holds between the conceptual definition of a context and its somewhat mechanical implementation because of a huge scale difference. In other words a computational context requires two sides: the conceptual side and the methodological side which cannot be unified. Please, don’t consider that according to suitable conceptual restrictions and to suitable methodological restrictions, one should find a suitable result, since the “hole” between these two sides is comparable to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.1