Table of contents - Special Issue: Library and information science and the philosophy of science
Guest Editors: Birger Hjrland
Library and information science and the philosophy of science
Birger HjørlandThe purpose of this article is to introduce the special issue of Journal of Documentation about library and information science (LIS) and the philosophy of science.
Critical realism as a philosophy and social theory in information science?
Marianne WikgrenThe philosophical position known as critical realism is briefly introduced, and some of its central features are used to connect the philosophy and the realist social theory to…
Pragmatism, neo‐pragmatism and sociocultural theory: Communicative participation as a perspective in LIS
Olof Sundin, Jenny JohannissonTo show that the neo‐pragmatist position of Richard Rorty, when combined with a sociocultural perspective, provides library and information science (LIS) with a forceful…
Phenomenology and information studies
John M. BuddTo examine work on phenomenology and determine what information studies can learn and use from that work.
Structuralism, post‐structuralism, and the library: de Saussure and Foucault
Gary P. Radford, Marie L. RadfordExplores the relevance of structuralism and post‐structuralism to the field of library and information science (LIS).
“Isms” in information science: constructivism, collectivism and constructionism
Sanna Talja, Kimmo Tuominen, Reijo SavolainenDescribes the basic premises of three metatheories that represent important or emerging perspectives on information seeking, retrieval and knowledge formation in information…
Hermeneutics as a bridge between the modern and the postmodern in library and information science
Joacim HanssonTo analyse the use of hermeneutics in library and information science (LIS).
On Grounded Theory – with some malice
Lars SeldénTo review critically the applicability of Grounded Theory.
Empiricism, rationalism and positivism in library and information science
Birger HjørlandThe purpose of this paper is to examine the importance and influence of the epistemologies: “empiricism”, “rationalism” and “positivism” in library and information science (LIS).
Comments on the articles and proposals for further work
Birger HjørlandThe purpose of this afterword is to examine which questions have been illuminated in the present issue and which theoretical problems still need to be addressed.
ISSN:
0022-0418e-ISSN:
1758-7379ISSN-L:
0022-0418Online date, start – end:
1945Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditor:
- Prof David Bawden