Information: Difference between revisions
imported>Carlos P. Caldeira No edit summary |
imported>Howard Arvi Hughes m (CZ Live + wgp) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The objective of '''information science''' is to determinate the informative content of determined object or event and to obtain a better measure of that content. The word “information” is derived of the Latin expression inform that signifies “to give a form to”, meaning the imposition of a structure over an indefinite set of facts. Given the fact that information is not matter neither energy, then it should not be considered an absolute greatness, instead it should be faced in a relative way, such as [[entropy]]. The expression “information quantity” is a metaphor without any physical or numerical property. The information isolated from a system and out of context does not have any meaning; it is the contextualization that brings information to live. Information is transformed in knowledge only when it has a practical utility and without this the information does not pass of mere abstract data, physical or not. | The objective of '''information science''' is to determinate the informative content of determined object or event and to obtain a better measure of that content. The word “information” is derived of the Latin expression inform that signifies “to give a form to”, meaning the imposition of a structure over an indefinite set of facts. Given the fact that information is not matter neither energy, then it should not be considered an absolute greatness, instead it should be faced in a relative way, such as [[entropy]]. The expression “information quantity” is a metaphor without any physical or numerical property. The information isolated from a system and out of context does not have any meaning; it is the contextualization that brings information to live. Information is transformed in knowledge only when it has a practical utility and without this the information does not pass of mere abstract data, physical or not. | ||
[[Category:CZ Live]] | |||
[[Category:Library and Information Science Workgroup]] |
Revision as of 06:38, 2 April 2007
The objective of information science is to determinate the informative content of determined object or event and to obtain a better measure of that content. The word “information” is derived of the Latin expression inform that signifies “to give a form to”, meaning the imposition of a structure over an indefinite set of facts. Given the fact that information is not matter neither energy, then it should not be considered an absolute greatness, instead it should be faced in a relative way, such as entropy. The expression “information quantity” is a metaphor without any physical or numerical property. The information isolated from a system and out of context does not have any meaning; it is the contextualization that brings information to live. Information is transformed in knowledge only when it has a practical utility and without this the information does not pass of mere abstract data, physical or not.