ADLER, MORTIMER, J. (1902- ):
Born in New York, Adler thought
philosophy in Columbia and Chicago universities and directed the
Institute for Philosophical Research. Known as 'a philosopher
for everyman', he appeals more to the general audience than to
the professional philosophers. His many publications cover conceptual
an
alysis on a variety of issues reflecting scholastic approach
and existential attitude.
Adler defines philosophy as a
discussion of the principles and purposes of human life in terms
of six ideas: truth, goodness, beauty, liberty, equality and justice.
The truth refers to the correspondence between a statement of
facts in language and the state of affairs in reality. Goodness
relates to the desired and desirable things in life, the beauty
to the enjoyable and admirable
experiences. The liberty or freedom
is determined by the social equality and justice. [Ch.P. Money,
1984]
Of particular interest to librarians
is his distinction of three types of reading (1) structural or
analytical, from the whole to the parts, (2) interpretative or
synthetical from the parts to the whole, and (3) critical evaluating
particular author's intention. Reading contributes to the development
of an individual, the reading material may be used for personal,
social, professional or vocational purposes. [W.Dunnett, 1984]
Adler considered reading not only
as a process of learning but also of thinking. "In reading
we are able to experience things that no longer exist and to understand
things that are totally unfamiliar to us' (In J.Z. Nitecki, 1986).
Direct, person-to-person communication
is almost always an interchange, in which comments, follows each
other in mutual simulation, similar to
relationship between pitcher
and catcher in baseball. Adler identified six ways of classifying
knowledge: (1) by diversity of objects (eg. knowledge of facts
or ideas), (2) by the faculty involved in knowing (eg. sense perception),
(3) by the method or means of knowing (eg. a priori or a posteriori),
(4) by degree of assent (eg. certain-probable), (5) by the end
or aim of knowing (eg., theoretical-practical), and (6) by the
media of communicating knowledge (eg. their means and methods).
He also dist
inguished between (a) education by learning as a natural
process of human being by discovery and experience, and (b) teaching,
learning by instruction (art). In society we learn by the combination
of both, the practical and artistic processes. (J.H. Shera, 1972)
There is never a perfect communication,
there is always a loss, and reading is better or worse depending
how active it is, and there is no absolutely passive reading.
(Shera, 1973)
Adler discusses the use of the
concept of form and its various meanings throughout Western philosophy
(Young, 1987).
Relevance :
P: Pragmatist: Common sense approach
to philosophy and ethics,
analyzes of the thinking processes.
L: Classification of knowledge, reading,
communication
(6 citations).
AMPERE, ANDRE MARIE (1775-1836)
French physicist remembered for
his major contribution to the foundations of electrodynamics.
In philosophy his focus was on introspective analysis of the association
of ideas, assuming the possibility of knowing inferentially the
relationships between things-in-themselves. He divided association
of ideas into ordinary recalls and merged ideas. The former is
unaffected by their contiguity, the latter blend with th
eir recollection
of previous ideas, as perception. His interest in classification
of science is today of mere historical value.
Ampere introduced, long before
Norbert Wiener, the word 'cybernetique' meaning 'the science of
government' (Colin E. Cherry, 1952). He defined it as the study,
within international law and diplomacy, of relationships between
people in making choices for achieving the desired goals. Thus
he considered cybernetics as a subscience of government,
'an art
of steering in general'. [M. Eden, 1983, p.409)
Relevance :
P: Realist: Knowledge by inference
of relationships between
things-in-themselves.
L: Historical reference to classification
and cybernetics. (2 citations)
AQUINAS, THOMAS (1225-1274):
Italian philosopher and theologian
and a proponent of realism in Christian religion. He Christianized
Aristotle's thesis of independence, form and the principle of
immanence (each existence aims at perfection).
At one time an oblate at the Monte
Cassino monastery, he studied Greek, Jewish and Arabian philosophies,
criticized Augustine's Platonic theory of knowledge for underestimating
the human reason to know truth, and formulated principles of Christian
humanism and naturalism.
In metaphysics Aquinas made a
distinction between (a) what a being is, and (b) the fact that
it is; a distinction between understanding the being (its essence)
and the act of being (esse). He maintained that knowledge
can be gained from sense data of matter leading to the study of
form. His dualism of matter and spirit is based on Aristotle's
view of matter and form. Science is defined as knowledge of facts
through general principles. Philosophy is the knowledge of ultimate
things through r
eason.
Overall, Aquinas had an open mind
approach in his search for information, and he stated that the
arguments from authority are the weakest kinds of evidence in
philosophical reasoning.
Aquinas affirmed the concept of
'censorship', justified by Plato's doctrine of general good, implemented
by Romans in the fifth century and later codified by the invention
of print in order to regulate the flow of information. (F.J. Stielow,
1983)
Aquinas assumed that form is an
ideal, abstract nonphysical, metaphysical and universal entity
that operates on matter, and has to do with essential nature of
soul of things. (Young, 1987)
Relevance :
P: Moderate realist: mediating between
philosophical
controversies such as the status
of universals (e.g.,
humanity,
justice, whiteness)
as realities in themselves or
mental constructs; importance
of metaphysical form.
L: Aristotelean viewpoint in Catholic
philosophy of
librarianship; support for censorship.
(2 citations)
ARISTOTLE (384-322 BC):
A member of Plato's Academy, a
tutor to Alexander of Macedonia and founder of the Peripatetic
school, Aristotle was
a philosopher and scientist, the first biologist,
and the student of change manifested in natural processes.
His contributions can be divided
into three distinct periods corresponding to the three major phases
in his life; changing from the enthusiastic support of Platonism,
the critique of Plato's notion of 'form' to the final rejection
of its metaphysics, replacing it with the principles of empirical
science.
The relationships between phy
sical
and formal, spiritual worlds in Greek philosophy, represented
by Plato humanistic systematized 'form philosophy' and Democritus
materialistic focus on 'matter philosophy', were joined by Aristotle's
synthesis between the two in ontological dualism (Wright, H.C.,
1986).
In every century an attempt is
made to compare the relationships between life (mind) with its
known at the time, machine (nervous system). This, was represented
by a central concept, 'pneuma' in Ari
stotle's philosophy. It probably
fulfilled a function of a general intermediator between 'psyche'
and 'soma', an important role in the life-matter relations. Aristotle
used the term 'pneuma' as a metaphor, which later was interpreted
as a prototype of an engine and a model for a mechanistic viewpoint
(Eden, M., 1983).
The interpretation of each term
changed with time. 'Pneuma' meant a spirit, vital force, psychic
energy. 'Psyche' referred to the principle of life, sou
l or mind,
the state of being alive, the source of consciousness or conscience.
'Soma' the body, developed into 'somatic' reference to the bodily
organisms and 'somatic data' originated with bodily sensations
as contrasted with 'sense data' caused by external sources.
Aristotle divided science (an
analytical knowledge of the causes of things) into theoretical
(abstract), practical (guide of conduct) and productive (guide
of art) disciplines. Based on a logical syllogis
m of subject-predicate
relationships, knowledge rests on the intellectual apprehension,
supported by the empirical aspects of subject-matter.
Scientific inquiry aims at discovery
of four causes of physical things: (1) material (physical matter),
(2) efficient (the origin of things), (3) formal (their form)
and (4) final (reason for their existence). Every object is a
union of two principles: of matter and of form, as a process from
potential to actual existence. The su
bstance stands for what things
are made of, the form is the specific characteristics of these
things. The substance can change its form from potential to the
actual.
The philosophy of nature is based
on real, spontaneous, continuous and directed changes from the
primary, simple elements of matter to more complex structure and
functions.
Aristotle (and Plato) considered
body as the instrument of the soul, its nature determined by its
func
tion; the soul is defined as the first entelechy of an organic
body as a life-principle, the force that moves the body as its
instrument. He distinguished between 2 kinds of truth: experiential
(artistic, true to the perceiver's experiences) and intellectual
(scientific, true to the objective reality). Poetry is an art
of making poetry, not its product. The art, 'the techne' is a
set of rules, system, or a method of making or doing'. Aristotle
disagreements with Plato were part of internal dispute, r
elated
to his emphases on common sense and empirical facts. He retained
from Plato the teleological point of view and an assumption that
reality lies in form. He rejected however, the two-worlds philosophy
of Plato, by trying to stay within this world. In general, the
scientific approach (primarily Aristotelean) stresses form in
matter, the humanistic the form and matter (basically Platonic);
both approaches are correct, depending on the object of study:
most scientists opt for immanence, most human
ists for transcendence;
the problem may arise when humanist study scientific phenomena
and vice versa. (H.C. Wright, 1977a)
Aristotle, together with Plato,
assumed that form is an ideal, abstract nonphysical, metaphysical
and universal entity that operates on matter, and has to do with
essential nature of soul of things. He specifically made a distinction
between eidos and morphe (ideal and material form), the material
object pass through 'potential' stages toward some
ideal actual
form; its purpose is to reach that ideal form (the distinction
between potential and actual existence) (Young, 1987).
In ethics, the human good is expressed
in the process of actualization of rational faculties in theoretical
inquiry and contemplation of truth. People by nature are 'political
animals', living in a society which through its institutions satisfies
our primary needs. Our happiness may be based on (1) pleasure
and enjoyment, (2) free and respo
nsible citizenship and (3) reflective
philosophy. Aristotle also distinguished between ethics as science
and as morality, maintaining that we start with intuition of the
principles and combine them with the knowledge by induction from
the interpreted sense-perception (Capuro,R, 1985).
Aristotle considered science as
dealing with absolute certainties, logically demonstrable truth
(this method exists only in mathematics; to him biology, ethics,
politics or psychology w
ere inquiries rather than sciences) (Machlup,
1980).
He focused more on the issues
related to natural phenomena than on the reasoning processes.
His own library collection and its organization were important
factors in the development of the Alexandrian library (Burke,
R.A., 1953).
Application of Aristotelean philosophy:
(a) General: Grover R. and J. Glazier (1986),
proposed a model for theory building based on A
ristotelean notion
that 'the whole is greater than the sum of its parts'; it is not
enough to understand each component individually, but that the
approach must be holistic; its basic principle is the concept
of unity or interconnectedness, integral to the taxonomy.
Terminology created by Aristotle
is still used today. The idea or the form of a particular object
is a concept based on the particular characteristics of that object's
species, with no independent existence
of its own. Contrary to
Plato's belief that everything first exists in the world of ideas,
Aristotle maintained that nothing exists in our consciousness
prior to its sense experience.
A.R. Anderson (1967) noted that
Boolean Algebra is based on the close parallels between Aristotelian
subject-predicate propositions and the ordinary algebra of numbers,
giving rise to the modern symbolic (rather than Aristotelean)
logic of quantifiers, so basic in the computer search proc
esses.
In his model Aristotle frequently
used mechanical and organismic analogies (G. Harmon, 1973) The Aristotelean law of identity
"A is A" is represented in bi-valued English, as opposed
to 'multi-valued' Chinese (the differences are part of relations
rather than absolute e.g., 'longness' and 'shortness'). Philosophy
of education is rooted in classical Aristotlean and Platonic tradition.
(J.H. Shera, 1972)
(b) Related to LIS:
Aristotle's discussion of the
first philosophy offers metaphysically useful observation and
an argument for the definition of librarianship. In Aristotle's
terms librarian qua librarian is a quality or an attribute predicated
to a more primary substance; fullest meaning of librarianship
requires extending beyond itself, to that upon which it depends
(J.Ch. McConnell, 1992).
Aristotle's analysis of change
consisted of isolating three elemen
ts: terminus ad quo, terminus
ad quem and the process. Related to librarianship, terminus ad
quem is the end of a process and is clearly identified with the
reader; the process itself can be related to the procedures, while
the terminus ad quo stands for either the books or the librarian
or both. The lack of a satisfactory answer which of the two it
is, causes ambiguity and confusion in the philosophy as well as
in library theory (Petocz, 1969).
In his argument against l
ibrarians
political neutrality, J.A. Hennessy (1981a) refers to Aristotle's
notion that inequality arises when two equals are treated unequally,
or when unequals are treated equally. This implies that a neutral
library cannot disseminate information effectively, hence political
information in libraries is crucial for minimizing impact of political
power and organization that takes the advantage of that inequality.
Shera (1965) noted that: (1) Aristotelean
concept of t
he hierarchy in classifying knowledge is rejected,
if classification is to adjust to constant changes in the development
of knowledge. For that reason the problem of Bacon's scheme of
classifying knowledge is traced to Aristotelean concept of hierarchy.
Librarians in response to constantly changing pattern of patrons
use of the collection, utilized Aristotelean concepts of genus,
species and subspecies by rationalizing the procedure in terms
of average use by average reader and added the compression
of
hierarchical pattern by mono-dimensionality of physical arrangements
of collections. (2) Organization of knowledge (and library collections)
always relates to Aristotelean concepts of genus, species, differentia,
property, accident, and hierarchical structure of knowledge. (3)
Library education should include both Aristotelean and symbolic
logic.
(c) Related to information:
Essential elements of the information
society were already identi
fied in Aristotle's time and reflected
in the 'Alexandrine imperative' to record all written knowledge.
Once recorded, the text should be compared and criticized, leading
to its better interpretation (Traue, J.E., 1989).
Aristotelean model of communication
as relationship between speaker-Speech-Audience was followed by
Shannon's telecommunication model translating 'speaker' into 'source',
'speech' into 'signal' and 'audience' into 'destination', adding
'transmitter' and
' receiver' (McGarry, K. J., 1975).
(d) Related to communication:
According to K.J. McGarry (1975),
Aristotle was the first philosopher who in his rhetoric provided
systematic study of communication. He based communication process
on three basic components: the speaker, the speech and the audience.
To him a person who cannot communicate is either below or above
humanity. He also pointed to the influence of the speaker's ethos,
the quality inf
luencing the reaction of the audience. Aristotle's
logic is linear, in which an argument follows from another in
order to be logically valid.
Aristotle's notion that man is
a political animal ('polis', the community or society) was converted
in the Twentieth century into the notion than man is a communicative
animal. This is an illustration of a sociological principle that
social development consists of increased differentiation simultaneous
with increased interrelatedn
ess (L. Landheer, 1957).
(e) Philosophy of LIS:Among the aspects of Aristotle's
philosophy relevant to librarianship are the notions of (a) unchangeability
of universal properties of objects (their form) and the changeability
of particular components (of their matter), both fundamental aspects
of the same thing. (b) Everything has a purpose or function (design
and order of the universe). (c) The concept of Golden Mean as
a balance between extremes. (d) Importance of organiz
ation (hierarchy).
(e) Education interpreted as a process of reasoning capacity,
necessary in making right choices, with the reciprocal relationships
between educated person and citizen. (f) social role of the library
in satisfying the intellectual needs of its society. The development of library
philosophy can be reviewed in terms of two major approaches of
Plato and Aristotle, reflecting the idealistic and pragmatic viewpoints.
Aristotelean approach was introduced by Chicago's Graduate Library
School which focused on sociological research and methodology,
implemented by Shera and Shores (McCrimmon, B., 1994).
In defining library philosophical
functions, J. Bekker (1976) notes Aristotle's distinction between
efficient cause (applicable in librarianship) and final cause.
Relevance :
P: Aristotle maintained that: (a)
rational faculties not only
order sense data but also provide
description of real things.
The thought and its power of a
priori reasoning provide a clue
to the nature of reality (Rationalistic
view). (b) Reality is
independent of the knowledge about
its existence. The function
of knowledge is to understand
things as beings and their very
being. Aristotle's realis
m is
also empirical, opposing
initially nominalism, and idealism
today (Realistic view).
(c) He distinguishing between:
(1) metaphysics as the ultimate
reality and applied disciplines
(e.g., logic, ethics,
psychology), and (2) form (what
is formally) and matter
(source potential for changes
in form) (Conceptual view).
L: Aristotle's philosophy provides
bases for the definition of
librarianship, its wholistic theory
and classification of
knowledge. He anticipated information
society and his
philosophy is now used as an argument
for the computer search
processes, and against political
neutrality of libraries. (21
citations)