Search (11 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × year_i:[1950 TO 1960}
  1. Lubetzky, S.: Cataloging rules and principles : a critique of the A.L.A. rules for entry and a proposed design for their revision (1953) 0.03
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    Imprint
    Washington : Library of Congress, Processing Dept.
    Issue
    Prepared for the Board on Cataloging Policy and Research of the A.L.A. Division of Cataloging and Classification.
  2. Seely, P.A.: Dewey Decimal Classification: relocations in edition 15 and criteria for edition 16 (1954) 0.01
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    Source
    Journal of cataloging and classification. 10(1954), S.3-11
  3. Cavender, T.P.: Subject heading for children's materials (1954) 0.01
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    Source
    Journal of cataloging and classification. 10(1954), S.197-202
  4. Frauendorfer, S. von: International unification of cataloging? (1951) 0.01
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  5. Merritt, L.C.: ¬A footnote on the need for local subject cataloging (1952) 0.01
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  6. Miller, G.A.: ¬The magical number, seven plus or minus two : some limits on our capacity for processing information (1956) 0.01
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  7. Dyson, G.M.: Advances in classification (1955) 0.01
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    Abstract
    My paper this evening will be chiefly concerned with problems relating to chemical data and to data which relate to subjects on the fringe of chemical science
  8. Lubetzky, S.: Development of cataloging rules (1953) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The growth of the rules which shape library catalogs and determine their character and usefulness is susceptible of much more extended treatment than is possible here. What is attempted in the following pages is to point out present trends and to indicate their significance. Evidently the year 1941 marked the beginning of a new phase in the evolution of cataloging rules. The publication then of the preliminary American second edition of the A.L.A. Catalog Rules appears as the culmination of a movement inspired exactly one hundred years earlier by the issue of Panizzi's rules. The latter followed a very long period in which rudimentary methods of cataloging slowly evolved and the need of rules to systematize the work gradually came to be recognized. As long as libraries were small and few books were published, the contents of a library could be recorded in any fashion that struck the fancy of the one in charge. Catalogs were made by librarians largely for their own use and had one simple function, that of an inventory or a collection of lists showing the holdings. The form and arrangement of the entries were arbitrary.
  9. Farradane, J.E.L.: ¬A scientific theory of classification and indexing and its practical applications (1950) 0.00
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    Abstract
    A classification is a theory of the structure of knowledge. From a discussion of the nature of truth, it is held that scientific knowledge is the only knowledge which can be regarded as true. The method of induction from empirical data is therefore applied to the construction of a classification. Items of knowledge are divided into uniquely definable terms, called isolates, and the relations between them, called operators. It is shown that only four basic operators exist, expressing appurtenance, equivalence, reaction and causation; using symbols for these operators, all subjects can be analysed in a linear form called an analet. With the addition of the permissible permutations of such analets, formed according to simple rules, alphabetical arrangement of the first terms provide a complete, logical subject index. Examples are given, and possible difficulties are considered. A classification can then be constructed by selection of deductive relations, arranged in hierarchical form. The nature of possible classifications is discussed. It is claimed that such an inductively constructed classification is the only true representation of the structure of knowledge, and that these principles provide a simple technique for accurately and fully indexing and classifying any given set of data, with complete flexibility
  10. Wiener, N.: ¬The human use of human beings : cybernetics and society (1950) 0.00
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    Date
    8. 7.2000 18:17:22
  11. ¬The Role of classification in the modern American library : papers presented at an institute conducted by the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library Science, 1.-4.11.1959 (1959) 0.00
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    Date
    3.10.2000 10:22:59