Experientialist Epistemology and Classification Theory: Embodied and Dimensional Classification

dc.contributor.authorTennis, Joseph T.
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-19T22:30:03Z
dc.date.available2017-01-19T22:30:03Z
dc.date.created2005
dc.description.abstractWhat theoretical framework can help in building, maintaining and evaluating networked knowledge organization resources? Specifically, what theoretical framework makes sense of the semantic prowess of ontologies and peer-to-peer sys- tems, and by extension aids in their building, maintenance, and evaluation? I posit that a theoretical work that weds both for- mal and associative (structural and interpretive) aspects of knowledge organization systems provides that framework. Here I lay out the terms and the intellectual constructs that serve as the foundation for investigative work into experientialist classifi- cation theory, a theoretical framework of embodied, infrastructural, and reified knowledge organization. I build on the inter- pretive work of scholars in information studies, cognitive semantics, sociology, and science studies. With the terms and the framework in place, I then outline classification theory s critiques of classificatory structures. In order to address these cri- tiques with an experientialist approach an experientialist semantics is offered as a design commitment for an example: metadata in peer-to-peer network knowledge organization structures.
dc.format.mimetypepdf
dc.identifier.citationTennis, Joseph T. Experientialist Epistemology and Classification Theory: Embodied and Dimen- sional Classification. Knowledge Organization, 32(2). 79-92.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/37980
dc.publisherKnowledge Organization
dc.titleExperientialist Epistemology and Classification Theory: Embodied and Dimensional Classification
dc.typeArticle

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