A pluralistic approach to the philosophy of classification

R Szostak�- library trends, 2015 - muse.jhu.edu
library trends, 2015muse.jhu.edu
Any classification system should be evaluated with respect to a variety of philosophical and
practical concerns. This paper explores several distinct issues: the nature of a work, the
value of a statement, the contribution of information science to philosophy, the nature of
hierarchy, ethical evaluation, pre-versus postcoordination, the lived experience of librarians,
and formalization versus natural language. It evaluates a particular approach to
classification in terms of each of these but draws general lessons for philosophical�…
Abstract
Any classification system should be evaluated with respect to a variety of philosophical and practical concerns. This paper explores several distinct issues: the nature of a work, the value of a statement, the contribution of information science to philosophy, the nature of hierarchy, ethical evaluation, pre-versus postcoordination, the lived experience of librarians, and formalization versus natural language. It evaluates a particular approach to classification in terms of each of these but draws general lessons for philosophical evaluation. That approach to classification emphasizes the free combination of basic concepts representing both real things in the world and the relationships among these; works are also classified in terms of theories, methods, and perspectives applied.
Project MUSE
Showing the best result for this search. See all results