3 May 2010 19:53
Re: If Academic Libraries Remove Computers, Will Anyone Come?
Laval Hunsucker <amoinsde <at> YAHOO.COM>
2010-05-03 17:53:55 GMT
2010-05-03 17:53:55 GMT
Thanks very much for your comment. One can of course always up the stakes, so to speak. But even so, this hasn't deterred LIS persons, and various other types, from constructing all kinds of further castles in the air around slogans such as, sure, "knowledge management", "knowledge organization" and so on. How long will it take before they move along to "wisdom organization", "meaning management", "revelation systems and services", "inspiration organization", or who knows what else ? Not that I want to get into word disputes, but I do believe that even information requires context ( within a given person's cognitive constellation, or sometimes within that person's affective make- up ) in order to qualify as information ( for any given person ). Any specific element contained in any material among the materials organized by a library can result in differing sorts of information for different recipients. It seems to me that organizing sources of ( potential ) information, and surrogates for those sources, is in itself an important enough and demanding enough task. Why don't we just call it what it is ? Semantic inflation or obfuscation is not really required, or helpful. At least in my opinion. - Laval Hunsucker Breukelen, Nederland ----- Original Message ---- From: "Mitchell, Michael" <Michael.Mitchell <at> BRAZOSPORT.EDU> To: NGC4LIB <at> LISTSERV.ND.EDU Sent: Mon, May 3, 2010 2:56:14 PM Subject: Re: [NGC4LIB] If Academic Libraries Remove Computers, Will Anyone Come? I'd substitute the word "knowledge" for your use of "information" and then agree with most of what you are saying. Knowledge includes a context for information. Michael Mitchell Technical Services Librarian Brazosport College Lake Jackson, TX michael.mitchell at brazosport.edu
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