Search (3 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × year_i:[1960 TO 1970}
  • × theme_ss:"Klassifikationstheorie: Elemente / Struktur"
  1. Grolier, E. de: ¬A study of general categories applicable to classification and coding in documentation (1962) 0.00
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  2. Moss, R.: Categories and relations : Origins of two classification theories (1964) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The resemblances between the categories of Aristotle and those of Ranganathan are shown. These categories are examined in the light of criticism made by Bertrand Russell and are shown to have no validity. Similar comparisons are made between the relations of Huma and Farradane. Farradane's work is a return to Hume, who is generally acknowledged as one of the founders of the British school of empirical philosophy which continues to Russell and beyond. In Russell's work lies the most promising line of development for information classification and indexing
    Type
    a
  3. Hillman, D.J.: Mathematical classification techniques for nonstatic document collections, with particular reference to the problem of relevance (1965) 0.00
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    Abstract
    It is first argued that classification schemes have an essentially hypothetical nature, whose adoption is not anything which can be true or false. Such schemes are therefore corrigible and susceptible of modification as fresh data accrue. These schemes are tools for the logical analysis of the structure of recorded knowledge. Their use amount to the adoption of a hypothesis. ... It is therefore imperative that classification schemes be devised which do allow us to deal with sets of documents that change with time. The formal bases of two such schemes are next described. They are known, respectively, as implicative lattices and subtractive lattices ...
    Type
    a

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