What does a philosopher do with documents? The most natural answer to this question would probably be that philosophers, as writers, produce documents. What would appear as less intuitive, though, is a philosopher producing documents about documents. But philosophy—and in particular ontology—has always been interested in what there is out there in the world. And documents are a peculiar class of objects, the stuff the world is filled with. This year, the Annual Meeting of the Document Academy has been hosted by a philosophy department for the first time: by the Department of Philosophy of the University of Turin. This editorial introduces the proceedings from this meeting
This essay is a contribution to social ontology, drawing on the work of John Searle and of Hernando ...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
The documedia revolution is a technological, social, and anthropological revolution. It has indeed b...
Three contributions are made to understanding the nature of documents. A survey of definitions of d...
Documents as we encounter them in everyday life are complex and diverse things, whether on paper, co...
A historical-conceptual account of the different genres, technologies, modes of inscription, and inn...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
As is well known, speech acts such as acts of promising can have ontological consequences. For examp...
A philosophy of information is grounded in a philosophy of documentation. Nunberg???s conception of...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
This paper presents the performative analysis of agency within and surrounding documents as a path t...
Attention in the humanities has lately turned to the re-thinking of traditional modes of publishing....
The notion that documents provide incontrovertible evidence has long been in question. Yet documents...
Social ontology has experienced significative growth in the last decades. In particular, a promising...
The function of the library is to collect, preserve, and provide access to recorded human communicat...
This essay is a contribution to social ontology, drawing on the work of John Searle and of Hernando ...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
The documedia revolution is a technological, social, and anthropological revolution. It has indeed b...
Three contributions are made to understanding the nature of documents. A survey of definitions of d...
Documents as we encounter them in everyday life are complex and diverse things, whether on paper, co...
A historical-conceptual account of the different genres, technologies, modes of inscription, and inn...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
As is well known, speech acts such as acts of promising can have ontological consequences. For examp...
A philosophy of information is grounded in a philosophy of documentation. Nunberg???s conception of...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
This paper presents the performative analysis of agency within and surrounding documents as a path t...
Attention in the humanities has lately turned to the re-thinking of traditional modes of publishing....
The notion that documents provide incontrovertible evidence has long been in question. Yet documents...
Social ontology has experienced significative growth in the last decades. In particular, a promising...
The function of the library is to collect, preserve, and provide access to recorded human communicat...
This essay is a contribution to social ontology, drawing on the work of John Searle and of Hernando ...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
The documedia revolution is a technological, social, and anthropological revolution. It has indeed b...