Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication

This historical study examines the Aristotelian foundations of the Library and Museum of Alexandria for the purpose of (1) understanding how the Library and Museum differed from preceding ancient Near Eastern information institutions (i.e., “protolibraries”) and (2) how Aristotle’s methodologies for...

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Main Author: Bales, Stephen Edward
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/475
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_graddiss-15392011-12-13T16:02:37Z Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication Bales, Stephen Edward This historical study examines the Aristotelian foundations of the Library and Museum of Alexandria for the purpose of (1) understanding how the Library and Museum differed from preceding ancient Near Eastern information institutions (i.e., “protolibraries”) and (2) how Aristotle’s methodologies for producing scientific knowledge were carried out in Alexandria. While protolibraries served as safeguards for maintaining a static cultural/political “stream of tradition” and created, organized, and maintained “library” documents to this end, the Library of Alexandria was a tool for theoretical knowledge creation. The Library materialized Aristotelian pre-scientific theory, specifically dialectic, and served the scholarly community of the Museum in its research. Following the Library, collections of materialized endoxa, or recorded esteemed opinions, became a necessary tool for use by scholarly communities. The Library established the post-Aristotelian paradigm under which academic libraries still operate. Although the Library of Alexandria represented a fundamental shift in the meaning and purpose of collections of recorded documents, a feminist critique of the post-Aristotelian library shows that the academic library, while used in knowledge creation, is rooted in a foundationalist philosophy that validates and maintains the status quo. 2008-12-01 text http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/475 Doctoral Dissertations Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Communication
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
spellingShingle Communication
Bales, Stephen Edward
Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
description This historical study examines the Aristotelian foundations of the Library and Museum of Alexandria for the purpose of (1) understanding how the Library and Museum differed from preceding ancient Near Eastern information institutions (i.e., “protolibraries”) and (2) how Aristotle’s methodologies for producing scientific knowledge were carried out in Alexandria. While protolibraries served as safeguards for maintaining a static cultural/political “stream of tradition” and created, organized, and maintained “library” documents to this end, the Library of Alexandria was a tool for theoretical knowledge creation. The Library materialized Aristotelian pre-scientific theory, specifically dialectic, and served the scholarly community of the Museum in its research. Following the Library, collections of materialized endoxa, or recorded esteemed opinions, became a necessary tool for use by scholarly communities. The Library established the post-Aristotelian paradigm under which academic libraries still operate. Although the Library of Alexandria represented a fundamental shift in the meaning and purpose of collections of recorded documents, a feminist critique of the post-Aristotelian library shows that the academic library, while used in knowledge creation, is rooted in a foundationalist philosophy that validates and maintains the status quo.
author Bales, Stephen Edward
author_facet Bales, Stephen Edward
author_sort Bales, Stephen Edward
title Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
title_short Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
title_full Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
title_fullStr Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
title_full_unstemmed Aristotle’s Contribution to Scholarly Communication
title_sort aristotle’s contribution to scholarly communication
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2008
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/475
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