Your write-up is largely correct and captures the modern enterprise semantic architecture very well. However, there are a few nuances around the relationships between **taxonomy, ontology, knowledge graph, semantic layer, and context layer** that are worth refining.
## Overall Assessment
**Accuracy: 8.5/10**
The biggest improvement is clarifying that:
1. A taxonomy is **not necessarily "inside" an ontology**, although it is often represented within one.
2. A knowledge graph is **not always persistent enterprise context**; it is a graph representation of knowledge that may or may not be enterprise-wide.
3. The semantic layer is more about **business abstraction and governance** than simply being "above" the knowledge graph.
---
# Refined Version
## Layer 1: Data Layer (Facts)
At the foundation sits the physical data landscape:
* Data warehouses
* Data lakes and lakehouses
* Operational databases
* SaaS applications
* Document repositories
* Event streams and message queues
* Log and telemetry systems
These systems contain raw facts but generally lack shared business meaning.
Metadata accompanies this layer, describing:
* schemas
* ownership
* lineage
* quality
* classifications
* governance attributes
Think of this layer as:
> "What data exists?"
---
## Layer 2: Taxonomy (Classification Structure)
A taxonomy provides a controlled hierarchical classification of concepts.
Examples:
```text
Product
├── Electronics
│ ├── Laptop
│ ├── Tablet
│ └── Phone
└── Furniture
├── Desk
└── Chair
```
A taxonomy primarily answers:
> "How do we classify things?"
Taxonomies are usually:
* hierarchical
* tree-based
* simpler than ontologies
* focused on categorization
A taxonomy may become part of an ontology, but the two are not identical.
---
## Layer 3: Ontology (Meaning Layer)
An ontology formally defines:
* concepts
* attributes
* relationships
* constraints
* rules
For example:
```text
Customer
Product
Order
Supplier
```
Relationships:
```text
Customer PURCHASES Product
Supplier PROVIDES Product
Order CONTAINS Product
```
Constraints:
```text
Every Order must have at least one Product
Every Customer must have an identifier
```
An ontology answers:
> "What do things mean, and how are they allowed to relate?"
Unlike taxonomies, ontologies are not limited to hierarchies.
They support:
* inheritance
* multiple relationship types
* logical reasoning
* semantic validation
---
## Layer 4: Knowledge Graph (Instantiated Knowledge)
The knowledge graph populates the ontology with actual entities.
Ontology says:
```text
Customer PURCHASES Product
```
Knowledge graph says:
```text
Alice PURCHASED MacBook Pro
Bob PURCHASED iPhone
Cisco SUPPLIES Router-X
```
Example:
```text
(Customer: Alice)
|
purchased
|
(Product: MacBook Pro)
```
The ontology defines the model.
The knowledge graph contains the actual instances.
Think:
```text
Ontology = Schema of meaning
Knowledge Graph = Data conforming to that schema
```
A knowledge graph answers:
> "What is actually true right now?"
---
## Layer 5: Semantic Layer (Business Abstraction Layer)
The semantic layer translates technical data structures into business concepts.
Examples:
Instead of:
```sql
SUM(order_amount)
```
Users see:
```text
Revenue
```
Instead of:
```sql
COUNT(DISTINCT customer_id)
```
Users see:
```text
Active Customers
```
It defines:
* KPIs
* Metrics
* Business rules
* Aggregations
* Governance logic
Examples:
```text
Annual Recurring Revenue
Customer Lifetime Value
Active Customer
Net Profit
```
The semantic layer answers:
> "What does the business officially mean by this metric?"
This is the layer consumed by:
* BI tools
* dashboards
* analytics platforms
* AI agents
---
## Layer 6: Context Layer (Runtime Intelligence)
This is the layer most AI systems operate in.
It dynamically assembles:
* user identity
* permissions
* session state
* current task
* retrieved documents
* knowledge graph facts
* semantic metrics
* policies
* recent interactions
Example:
A sales agent asks:
> "Which customers are at risk this quarter?"
The context layer may combine:
```text
Knowledge Graph:
Customer relationships
Semantic Layer:
Risk Score KPI
User Context:
Regional Sales Manager
Policies:
Can only view APAC customers
Recent Activity:
Last 30 days interactions
```
The AI receives:
```text
The right information
for the right user
at the right moment
```
This layer answers:
> "What information is relevant for this decision right now?"
---
# Mental Model
A useful way to remember the hierarchy:
```text
Context Layer
↑
Semantic Layer
↑
Knowledge Graph
↑
Ontology
↑
Taxonomy
↑
Metadata
↑
Data
```
Or in terms of increasing meaning:
```text
Data
↓
Classification (Taxonomy)
↓
Meaning (Ontology)
↓
Facts & Relationships (Knowledge Graph)
↓
Business Interpretation (Semantic Layer)
↓
Decision Context (Context Layer)
```
# One-Sentence Definitions
* **Taxonomy** → Hierarchical classification of concepts.
* **Ontology** → Formal definition of concepts, relationships, and rules.
* **Knowledge Graph** → Real entities and relationships instantiated from an ontology.
* **Semantic Layer** → Business-friendly abstraction of data and metrics.
* **Context Layer** → Runtime assembly of relevant information for humans or AI agents.
For GenAI, RAG, and Agentic AI architectures, the most important distinction to internalize is:
> **Taxonomy classifies, Ontology defines meaning, Knowledge Graph stores connected facts, Semantic Layer defines business truth, and Context Layer determines what knowledge is relevant right now.**
That mental model will serve you well when studying enterprise AI, graph databases, agent systems, and knowledge engineering.