Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we study the theoretical intersections and dialogues between some foundational authors on classification and indexing of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries that helped developing the theoretical-methodological framework of knowledge organization. More specifically, we highlight and analyze the theoretical convergences of Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan as they can provide a clearer picture of the historical and theoretical contributions to the epistemological foundations of knowledge organization. Our methodology follows a critical-descriptive approach to the analysis of the main contributions of the authors and the critical reflections of some specialists and biographers. We continue with a discussion of the links between bibliographic classifications and knowledge organization drawing on the ideas of Bliss; then, we divide our historical narrative between the theoretical contributions during the nineteenth-century (Harris, Dewey, and Cutter) and the twentieth century (Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan); and finally, we present a discussion of the history of knowledge organization from the point of view of the theoretical and methodological development of classification and indexing at the turn of the nineteenth century to the twentieth century. We conclude with some remarks on their main contributions to the development of the knowledge organization field.

Highlights

  • The discipline of knowledge organization is intrinsically linked to classification systems – here understood as systems that provide an organization of concepts and subjects – and how they contribute to the epistemological configuration of the field (Dahlberg, 1993)

  • The research question of this paper is: What are the dialogical elements and theoretical convergences in Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan in relation to the development of the Knowledge Organization field? Our historical approach aims to highlight the theoretical intersections between some of the most influential authors on classification and indexing of the 19th and 20th centuries, namely Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan, that helped to develop the theoretical‐methodological framework of knowledge organization

  • We have analyzed the contributions of some of the most important authors in the history of knowledge organization, namely Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan, in order to reveal some theoretical dialogues and aspects that are not always explicit in the literature. Assuming these authors and their works are foundations of the theoretical and methodological frameworks in knowledge organization, we studied their main convergences in order to historicize their contributions in the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century, drawing attention to potential dialogues in the epistemological development of the field

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Summary

Introduction

The discipline of knowledge organization is intrinsically linked to classification systems – here understood as systems that provide an organization of concepts and subjects – and how they contribute to the epistemological configuration of the field (Dahlberg, 1993). The dialectics of the areas of classification and indexing as well as their main contributors do not seem to be explicit in the historical narrative of Knowledge Organization in the 19th and 20th centuries In this sense, the research question of this paper is: What are the dialogical elements and theoretical convergences in Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan in relation to the development of the Knowledge Organization field? Our historical approach aims to highlight the theoretical intersections between some of the most influential authors on classification and indexing of the 19th and 20th centuries, namely Harris, Dewey, Cutter, Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan, that helped to develop the theoretical‐methodological framework of knowledge organization. The analysis of the“dialogicity”between these authors is based on the structural bases and the theoretical-methodological principles that they proposed, such as the main classes in Harris and Dewey systems, the principles for the development of subject headings in Cutter, and the analytic-synthetic processes in Otlet, Kaiser, and Ranganathan

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