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Bacon, Warrant, and Classification

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Title: Bacon, Warrant, and Classification


1
Bacon, Warrant, and Classification
  • Hope A. Olson
  • School of Information Studies
  • University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

2
Warrant
  • the justifying reason or ground for an action,
    belief, or feeling OED
  • justification for choice and order of classes or
    concepts in a classification

3
Pre-Baconian classifications
  • Based on existing knowledge
  • Reflect scientific inquiry or pedagogical goals
  • Kusukawa, Sachiko. (1996). Bacons classification
    of knowledge. In The Cambridge Companion to
    Bacon, Markku Peltonen, ed., pp. 47-74.
    Cambridge Cambridge University Press

4
Aristotle
  • Sciences independent of each other (Posterior
    Analytics)
  • Based on their own premisses
  • Classification reflects essential attributes
  • Divided animals by their means of reproduction
    (Generation of Animals)
  • Scientific warrant
  • Result of scientific inquiry

5
Liberal arts
  • Late classical and medieval classifications are
    pedagogical
  • Educational warrant
  • Hugh of St. Victor
  • Educational warrant literary warrant
  • What to read and in what order to gain wisdom to
    come closer to God

6
Francis Bacons Classification
  • The Proficience and Advancement of Learning
    Divine and Human (The Advancement of Learning
    1605)
  • De dignitate et augmentis scientiarum (De
    augmentis 1623) expanded Latin version

7
Francis Bacons Classification
  • Classification to show integrated entirety of
    knowledge
  • Include knowledge not yet developed
  • Bacons approach to classification as
  • Reflection of knowledge
  • Guide to expansion of knowledge

8
17thC scholarship, in Bacons view, contributed
to
  • magnificence and memory rather than to
    progression and proficience
  • augment the mass of learning in the multitude of
    learned men rather than rectify or raise the
    sciences themselves (AL 66)

9
Human intellectual process
  • The sense, which is the door of the intellect,
    is affected by individuals only. The images of
    those individuals that is, the impressions
    which they make on the sense fix themselves in
    the memory, and pass into it in the first
    instance entire as it were, just as they come.
    These the human mind proceeds to review and
    ruminate and thereupon either simply rehearses
    them, or makes fanciful imitations of them, or
    analyses and classifies them. Wherefore from
    these fountains, Memory, Imagination, and Reason,
    flow these three emanations, History, Poesy, and
    Philosophy and there can be no others. (De
    augmentis book II, chapter 1)

10
Human intellectual process
Sense-data Impressions
Memory
Imagination Fanciful imitation
Reason Analyze, Classify
Review, Ruminate
History
Poesy
Philosophy
11
Epistemological warrant
  • Classificatory structure comes from the human
    intellectual process
  • Includes knowledge yet to come
  • ? the structure leads the development of
    knowledge rather than following it

12
Post-Baconian classifications
  • Often use Bacons classes and sequence, but not
    epistemological warrant
  • Encyclopedists
  • Hegel
  • Melvil Dewey

13
  • French encyclopedists, Diderot and dAlembert,
    used the same main classes
  • Pedagogical warrant

14
G.W.F. Hegel
  • Hegels Being, Essence, Idea parallel to
    Bacons History, Poesy, Philosophy
  • Ontological warrant

15
Dewey Decimal Classification
Amherst College chapel to literary warrant
16
Bibliographic classifications
  • LCC relies on literary warrant
  • DDC now updated using literary warrant
  • Bliss, Ranganathan, CRG advocate scientific or
    philosophical warrant
  • Beghtol, Clare. (1986). Semantic validity
    Concepts of warrant in bibliographic systems.
    Library Resources Technical Services
    30(April/June) 109-125

17
Classification as active agent
  • Relationship between bibliographic classification
    and classification of knowledge
  • If separate, literary warrant is sufficient
  • If what is recorded and classified relates to
    knowledge, literary warrant is not sufficient

18
Gaps in knowledge
  • Literary warrant cannot identify gaps
  • Based on record of existing knowledge
  • Educational warrant cannot identify gaps
  • Based on teaching existing knowledge
  • Ontological warrant cannot identify gaps
  • Based on what has been discovered to exist
  • Scientific warrant reveals some gaps
  • Draws structure from what exists revealing some
    gaps

19
Epistemological warrants reveals gaps
  • Postmodern doubts of universal frameworks
  • Bacon leaves openings proposing his small globe
    of the intellectual world, as truly and
    faithfully as I could discover

20
Attractive modesty flexibility
  • For I could not be true and constant to the
    argument I handle, if I were not willing to go
    beyond others, but yet not more willing than to
    have others go beyond me again which may the
    better appear by this, that I have propounded my
    opinions naked and unarmed, not seeking to
    preoccupate the liberty of mens judgements by
    confutations. (AL 225)

21
Bacons argument
  • Bacon advocates an epistemological warrant for
    classification
  • He looks to classification to integrate knowledge
    and reveal gaps
  • He acknowledges that his small globe of the
    intellectual world is not the ultimate universal
    framework

22
Bacon from the 21st century
  • A classification can
  • Integrate knowledge
  • Reveal gaps point to a research agenda
  • Other classifications are potentially valid
  • Alternative classifications based on
    epistemological stances can also
  • Integrate knowledge
  • Reveal gaps point to a research agenda

23
Hope A. Olsonholson_at_uwm.edu
  • School of Information Studies
  • University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
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