The Western Devaluation of Knowledge

By (author) Charles B. Osburn

Hardback - £105.00

Publication date:

05 December 2013

Length of book:

314 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

238x166mm
7x9"

ISBN-13: 9781442228795

The Western Devaluation of Knowledge is an exploration of the causes and effects of Western cultural changes that have evolved during the past half millennium of industrialization to diminish the value of knowledge as process. Western culture has developed a conceptualization and valuation of knowledge that reverses the traditional knowledge continuum that connects data (information) to understanding. As a result, we displace the subjective and human features of knowledge with automated systems that conforms with information and devalues the knowledge process.

This book explains this change as a result of the industrial influences that began to gain strength in the 15th century and continued on that path through today’s economic and cultural globalization. The author shows that science and technology, while bringing good on many fronts have also:
  • Weakened or replaced traditional sources of cultural authority,
  • Advanced a materialistic outlook;
  • Hastened the broad spread of capitalist values, principles, and strategies;
  • Fostered a pervasive dependence on technological innovation; and
  • Nurtured an extreme rationality.

Osburn shows that while any one of the above cultural currently would have been sufficient to cause deep and generalized change, their confluence was the deciding inspiration for a different epistemology, one that has altered the generally accepted meaning and valuation of knowledge.
The Western Devaluation of Knowledge by Charles B. Osburn is a historical account of how knowledge and information have become conflated in capitalist/consumerist society. It is a valued contribution to those in the library field who are trying to think broadly about the transformations brought about by the information revolution.