Scarecrow Press
Pages: 298
Trim: 5½ x 8½
978-0-8108-5942-5 • Paperback • June 2007 • $102.00 • (£78.00)
978-1-4616-7338-5 • eBook • June 2007 • $96.50 • (£74.00)
Mario Pérez-Montoro is a Professor in the Department of Information Science at the Universitat de Barcelona and IN3 researcher (Internet Interdisciplinary Institute). His work focuses on conceptual, semantic, epistemological and pragmatic aspects of Information Science and Knowledge Management.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Part 2 INTRODUCTION. The Scope and Characteristics of the Phenomenon of Information
Chapter 3 1 Introduction
Chapter 4 2 Description of Information Flow
Chapter 5 3 Aim and Scope of this Work
Part 6 CHAPTER 1. The Mathematical Theory of Communication: Constraints for a Semantics of Information
Chapter 7 1 Introduction
Chapter 8 2 The Amount of Information
Chapter 9 3 Amount of Information and Information Flow
Chapter 10 4 Mathematical Constraints and Information Content
Part 11 CHAPTER 2. Dretske's Analysis of Information: A Semantic Approach in Probabilistic Terms
Chapter 12 1 Introduction
Chapter 13 2 The Dretskean Approach
Chapter 14 3 Difficulties with Dretske's Approach
Chapter 15 4 Summary and Conclusions
Part 16 CHAPTER 3. The Relational Theory of Meaning: A Proposal for a Global Semantics of Information
Chapter 17 1 Introduction
Chapter 18 2 A New Conceptual Framework: The Relational Theory of Meaning
Chapter 19 3 Linguistic Meaning and Informational Content
Chapter 20 4 Agents and Information Content
Chapter 21 5 The Relational Theory of Meaning versus Dretske's Definition of Informational Content
Chapter 22 6 Reliability, Fallibility, and Constraints
Chapter 23 7 Summary and Conclusions
Part 24 CHAPTER 4. Toward a New Definition of Informational Content: The Extensional Approach
Chapter 25 1 Introduction
Chapter 26 2 The Extensional Approach
Chapter 27 3 Channels, Reliability, and Fallibility
Chapter 28 4 The Extensional Approach versus the Relational Theory of Meaning and the Dretskean Approach
Chapter 29 5 Pure Informational Content and Incremental Informational Content
Chapter 30 6 Summary and Conclusions
Part 31 Bibliography
Part 32 Index
Part 33 About the Author
Pérez-Montoro's highly detailed book provides a synthesis of today's key theoretical work in the field of information transmission and flow...this book provides a critically needed update in regard to theory and technology...Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
Pérez-Montor (information science, U. de Barcelona, Spain) endeavors to describe a theoretical definition of information flow that accounts for the necessary and sufficient conditions to conclude that a specific signal carries a particular informational content and also provides a description of the regularities or supporting information links that exemplify the property of reliability (and in some cases fallibility). He first analyzes the main ideas of the mathematical theory of communication, rejecting much but retaining its treatment of informational and communicational constraints. He then turns to philosopher Fred Dretske's analysis of the notion of information, again finding many deficiencies but arguing that the relational theory of meaning presented by philosophers Jon Barwise and John Perry resolves many of these problems, with the significant exception of the failure to satisfactorily explain the reliability and fallibility exhibited by the supporting regularities of information flow. This final deficiency is addressed by Peréz-Montor's own "existential approach" to information flow.
— Scitech Book News