Sunday, October 3, 2010

Catch Phrases Of Moon



Librarians and programmers have a common obsession objects to the classification. Then this blog is dedicated to waterway between the two worlds, begins with a classification.
One of the first ways of approaching the study of the issues raised regarding the FRBR work is surrounded by a few works and try to set up classes. This led me to make a box works in which I tried to establish what are the lessons that these works belong. The table has been growing and now are actually several. The criteria for this classification are temporary and subjective, while taking into account many other existing classifications, such as document types Martha Yee and Tom Delsey. The idea is to be deployed through them the complexity of the problem in ways that serve to induce more reflections and reconsiderations that affirm positive knowledge. Spine References seek to clarify the scope of each classification.
Some works merit clarification: Le Livre Mallarmé is a project that never materialized. Umberto Eco presents it in Open Work: "In the Livre , these pages should not have been to follow a fixed order; should have been relatable in different orders according to laws of permutation. Taking a series of separate booklets (not together by a binder that determine suceción), the first and last page of an issue should have been written on a single large sheet folded in two to mark the beginning and the end of the issue, in interior, would play single sheets, simple, mobile, interchangeable, but so that, in any order placed, the discus possessed a complete sense. "The revolutionary idea took shape, if I mistake not, just to Rayuela Julio Cortázar.
4 '33'' is a work of John Cage consisting of 4 minutes and thirty three seconds of silence. The interpretation of this work is a pianist who is turning the leaves of the score, but without producing any sound, because the score is only silence.
The Voynich Manuscript is a medieval manuscript apparently written in a coded language and a profusion of illustrations that could not even be deciphered.
I think the other examples are well known.

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