Margaret Elizabeth Egan y la genealogía de la filosofía de la bibliotecología
Main Author: | Morán Reyes, Ariel Antonio |
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Format: | Journal PeerReviewed Book |
Bahasa: | es |
Terbitan: |
Universidade de São Paulo, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras
, 2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
http://eprints.rclis.org/23886/1/Margaret%20Elizabeth%20Egan%20y%20la%20genealog%C3%ADa%20de%20la%20filosof%C3%ADa%20de%20la%20bibliotecolog%C3%ADa.pdf http://eprints.rclis.org/23886/ |
Daftar Isi:
- The article examines the constitutive structure of social epistemology and argues that this is the brainchild of Margaret Elizabeth Egan, and that Jesse Hauk Shera then “re-conceptualized” this theory confusingly. Moreover, in this paper, are establish what ideas shape the genealogy of philosophy of librarianship in the twentieth century. Added to this, it determines that Shera’s ideas do not belong of this genealogical line, rather they are in a parallel line. Shera moved away from the original social epistemology of Egan, and he went to strange lands, which —contrary to the most basic and conventional theoretical thinking in librarianship— not commune with the preceding tradition. On the other hand, the text states that the Floridi’s philosophy of information supports librarianship tradition, its precepts and evolution.