“The development of information research has increased considerably the interaction of emerging information science with other disciplines. Librarianship has traditionally had links with education and classification and has drawn ideas from logic and philosophy. But during the last fifty years new insights and methods have been derived from sociology and social psychology, from computer science, from operations research and related quantitative approaches, from communications research, from linguistics, and most recently from the new hybrids: cognitive science and artificial intelligence.”
Source: Fifty years of information progress (1994), p. 7.
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Brian Campbell Vickery84
British information theorist 1918–2009Related quotes
Margaret Mead (1901–1978) American anthropologist
Source: 1930s, Growing Up in New Guinea (1930), p. 406
Russell L. Ackoff (1919–2009) Scientist
Source: 1950s, The development of operations research as a science, 1956, p. 265, the lead paragraph ; Cited in: Joe Kelly (1969) Organizational behaviour. p. 26.
Brian Campbell Vickery (1918–2009) British information theorist
Source: Information Science in Theory and Practice (1987), p. 1; As cited in: Lyn Robinson and David Bawden (2011).
J. J. Thomson (1856–1940) British physicist
Cited from Lord Rayleigh, The Life of Sir J. J. Thomson (1943), p. 199.
Attributed
Eric R. Kandel (1929) American neuropsychiatrist
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis, and the New Biology of Mind (2008)
Andrew Lang (1844–1912) Scots poet, novelist and literary critic
Andrew Lang (1900) "[ Anthropology and Religion]", In: The Making of Religion, (Chapter II), Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp. 39–64.
Martin Gardner (1914–2010) recreational mathematician and philosopher
The Night Is Large (1996), Introduction to Part III, Pseudoscience p. 171
Context: Debunking bad science should be constant obligation of the science community, even if it takes time away from serious research or seems to be a losing battle. One takes comfort from the fact there is no Gresham's laws in science. In the long run, good science drives out bad.