From the Universe of Knowledge to the Universe of Concepts: The Structural Revolution in Classification for Information Retrieval

During the twentieth century, bibliographic classification theory underwent a structural revolution. The first modern bibliographic classifications were top-down systems that started at the universe of knowledge and subdivided that universe downward to minute subclasses. After the invention of faceted classification by S.R. Ranganathan, the ideal was to build bottom-up classifications that started with the universe of concepts and built upward to larger and larger faceted classes. This ideal has not been achieved, and the two kinds of classification systems are not mutually exclusive. This paper examines the process by which this structural revolution was accomplished by looking at the spread of facet theory after 1924 when Ranganathan attended the School of Librarianship, London, through selected classification textbooks that were published after that date. To this end, the paper examines the role of W.C.B. Sayers as a teacher and author of three editions of The Manual of Classification for Librarians and Bibliographers. Sayers influenced both Ranganathan and the various members of the Classification Research Group (CRG) who were his students. Further, the paper contrasts the methods of evaluating classification systems that arose between Sayers’s Canons of Classification in 1915–1916 and J. Mills’s A Modern Outline of Library Classification in 1960 in order to demonstrate the speed with which one kind of classificatory structure was overtaken by another.

[1]  Arthur Maltby,et al.  Sayer's manual of classification for librarians , 1975 .

[2]  Clare Beghtol,et al.  'Facets' as Interdisciplinary undiscovered Public Knowledge: S.R. Ranganathan in India and L. Guttman in Israel , 1995, J. Documentation.

[3]  Melvil Dewey,et al.  A Classification and Subject Index for Cataloguing and Arranging the Books and Pamphlets of a Library , 2006 .

[4]  W. C. Berwick Sayers,et al.  A manual of classification for librarians and bibliographers : with illustrations and bibliography , 1947 .

[5]  Phyllis A. Richmond The Eighteen Editions of the Dewey Decimal Classification; A Classification and Subject Index for Cataloging and Arranging Books and Pamphlets of a Library (Book Review) , 1977 .

[6]  J. Mills A modern outline of library classification , 1967 .

[7]  Hans H. Wellisch,et al.  Subject retrieval in the seventies : new directions , 1972 .

[8]  Shiyali Ramamrita Ranganathan,et al.  The colon classification , 1965 .

[9]  Shiyali Ramamrita Ranganathan Colon Classification: Basic Classification , 2006 .

[10]  A. J. Wells,et al.  The Fundamentals of Library Classification , 2021 .

[11]  E. J. Coates Classification in Information Retrieval: the Twenty Years following Dorking , 1978, J. Documentation.

[12]  Vanda Broughton,et al.  The need for a faceted classification as the basis of all methods of information retrieval , 2006, Aslib Proc..

[13]  Jack Mills,et al.  Faceted Classification and Logical Division in Information Retrieval , 2004, Libr. Trends.

[14]  I. Borg,et al.  Facet Theory: Form and Content , 1995 .

[15]  devised by Melvil Dewey Dewey decimal classification and relative index , 1989 .