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Selected Works

Library and Information Science

2004

Jonathan Furner

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Information Studies Without Information, Jonathan Furner Dec 2003

Information Studies Without Information, Jonathan Furner

Jonathan Furner

In philosophy of language, the phenomena fundamental to human communication are routinely modeled in ways that do not require commitment to a concept of "information" separate from those of "data," "meaning," "communication," "knowledge," and "relevance" (inter alia). A taxonomy of conceptions of information may be developed that relies on commonly drawn philosophical distinctions (between linguistic, mental, and physical entities, between objects and events, and between particulars and universals); in such a taxonomy, no category requires the label "information" in order to be differentiated from others. It is suggested that a conception of information-as-relevance is currently the most productive of advances …


Conceptual Analysis: A Method For Understanding Information As Evidence, And Evidence As Information, Jonathan Furner Dec 2003

Conceptual Analysis: A Method For Understanding Information As Evidence, And Evidence As Information, Jonathan Furner

Jonathan Furner

The utility of conceptual analysis for archival science is assessed by means of an exploratory evaluation in which the concept of evidence is analyzed. Usage of the term “evidence” in the philosophies of science, law, and history is briefly reviewed; candidates for necessary conditions of evidentiariness are identified and examined; and taxonomies are built of evidentiariness and of archival inference. Correspondences are shown to exist between the concepts of evidentiariness and relevance, and between the domains of archival science and social epistemology, thereby pointing in promising directions for further research. The tentative conclusion is reached that conceptual analysis may profitably …