Ranganathan and the faceted classification theory
Abstract
The present study contextualizes Ranganathan’s main theoretical contributions to the classification theory and addresses the Five
Laws of Library Science. The major milestones in philosophical and bibliographic classifications are presented to show that the
classification system has evolved from purely philosophical schemes, which were focused on the systematization of knowledge,
into modern bibliographic classification systems. Facet analysis is considered a contribution to the classification process since it
allows the use of an approach that encompasses different points of view of the same subject, as opposed to the enumerative
systems. This article also discusses Ranganathan’s five fundamental categories, known as Personality, Matter, Energy, Space and
Time, and points out to criticism of this form of categorization in the literature. The Spiral of Scientific Method and the Spiral
Model of Development of subjects are presented; the latter is the meta-model of the former. The Colon Classification, which was
first published in 1933, was also discussed. Finally, the applicability of the faceted classification in today’s world was addressed.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Transinformação
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.