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We live in an era of "explosions." Not the least threatening of
these inflationary events is the information explosion. In spite of
data banks, automated indexes, and computerized retrieval systems,
science is being overflooded by its products. Much of the
responsibility for this state of affairs must rest with a system
that tends to reward quantity rather than quality of publications,
and on the resulting misap prehension that the aim of scientific
research is the gathering of data rather than the advancement of
knowledge. The sponsors of congresses and symposia who insist on a
lasting record of their proceedings, the authors and editors who
have no compunc tion about printing trivial or redundant
information, and the publishing houses them selves, which can
hardly be expected to favor restraint, also bear part of the respon
sibility. One of the consequences of the information explosion is a
change in our attitude towards new books. Whereas we used to
welcome their appearance and to take them as useful and good until
proven otherwise, we now greet them with suspicion and wonder even
before opening them whether they were really necessary.
Fortunately, some of them still are and perform a real service by
taking an unwieldy mass of data dispersed in a variety of journals,
and organizing it into a coherent synthesis of the state of
knowledge in a given field. Such books actually serve to advance
knowledge and become landmarks."
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