Mortimer Taube (December 6, 1910 – September 3, 1965)[1] was an American librarian. He is recognized as one the 100 most important leaders in American Library and Information Science of the 20th century.[2] He was important to the Library Science field because he invented Coordinate Indexing, which uses "uniterms" in the context of cataloging. It is the forerunner to computer based searches. In the early 1950s he started his own company, Documentation, Inc. with Gerald J. Sophar. Previously he worked at such institutions as the Library of Congress, the Department of Defense, and the Atomic Energy Commission. American Libraries calls him "an innovator and inventor, as well as scholar and savvy businessman."[2]Current Biography called him the "Dewey of mid-twentieth Librarianship."[3] Mortimer Taube was a very active man with varying interests such as tennis, philosophy, sailing, music, and collecting paintings.
In 1944, Mortimer Taube transitioned from academia to focus on becoming a true innovator in the field of science, especially Information Science. After the war, there was a huge boom of scientific invention, and the literature to go with it. The contemporary indexing and retrieval methods simply could not handle the inflow.[3] New technology was needed to meet this high demand and Mortimer Taube delivered. He dabbled in many projects during and after the war. In 1944 he joined the Library of Congress as the Assistant Chief of the General Reference and Bibliographical Division.[5] He was then head of the Science and Technology project from 1947 to 1949.[3] He worked for the Atomic Energy Commission, which was established after "the Manhattan District Project wanted to evaluate and publish the scientific and engineering records showing the advancements made during the war."[3] Their goal was also to make the material more readily available to the public and to open up business with countries abroad.[3] He was Deputy Chief of the Technical Information Service.[5] He also presented on the subject of Information Storage and Retrieval at a Symposium held by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research in 1958 in Washington D.C.[6]
Documentation, Inc.
Mortimer Taube also worked heavily with documentation, the literature pertaining to the new scientific innovation.[3] He was a consultant and Lecturer on Scientific Documentation and was even the editor of American Documentation in the years 1952–1953.[3] In 1952, Taube co-founded Documentation, Inc. with Gerald J. Sophar and two others.[5] Documentation, Inc. was the "largest aerospace information center" and did work for NASA.[5] Here Taube developed Coordinate Indexing, an important innovation in the field of Library Science. Taube defines Coordinate Indexing as, "the analysis of any field of information into a set of terms and the combination of these terms in any order to achieve any desired degree of detail in either indexing or selection."[7] Coordinate Indexing used "uniterms" to make storing and retrieving information easier and faster.[3] Uniterms "constitute a special set of rules and requirements which makes both the analysis into terms and the combination of the terms in order to specify items of information a remarkably simple and efficient process."[7] Taube had split coordinate indexing into two categories, item and term indexing.[8] It used punch cards and a machine reader to search for specific items or documents by terms or keywords.[8] Documentation, Inc. also brought forth the IBM 9900 Special Index Analyzer, also known as COMAC.[3][9] COMAC stood for "continuous multiple access controller." This machine handled data punch cards, used for information storage and retrieval.[3] It made "logical relationships among terms."[3] Even though Documentation Inc. started as a small company, it soon grew to well over 700 members.[5]
Personal life
Taube married Bernice, and they had three children: a son named Donald, and two daughters, Deborah and Susan.[5]
Taube had a variety of interests, including tennis, sailing, music, and collecting paintings. He was very active, frequently sleeping for only two or three hours a night. Taube developed an interest in philosophy in his later years and was writing a book on the subject before he died. [10] While his technology work influenced modern computer cataloguing systems and OPACs, he did not have a high regard for computers, as they "didn't think."[5]
Death
Taube died suddenly at the age of 54 after sailing on his ship due to a heart attack.[5]
Selected works
(1964). “Theoretical Principles of Information Organization in Librarianship.” Library Quarterly 34 (July): 352–61.
(1964). “Coming of Age of Information Technology.” Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 52 (January): 120–27.
(1964). A Program for the Library Research Institute of the University of California. Bethesda Md: Documentation.
(1961).Computers and Common Sense, the Myth of Thinking Machines. 1961.[3]
(1961). United States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research. 1961. Experiments with the IBM-9900 and a Discussion of an Improved Comac as Suggested by These Experiments April 1961. Washington D.C: Documentation.
(1959). Emerging Solutions for Mechanizing the Storage and Retrieval of Information. Washington: Documentation.
(1958). Taube, Mortimer, and Harold Wooster. Information Storage and Retrieval. New York: Columbia University Press, 1958.
(1958). United States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research Directorate of Research Communication. An Evaluation of the Use Studies of Scientific Information. Washington D.C: Documentation.
(1957), United States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research. Meaning, Linguistic Structures and Storage and Retrieval Systems. Washington D.C: Documentations.
(1957) With Laurence B Heilprin,, Documentation Incorporated and United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Directorate of Advanced Studies. The Relation of the Size of the Question to the Work Accomplished by a Storage and Retrieval System. Washington D.C: Documentation : Distributed by Directorate of Advanced Studies Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
(1956). Machine retrieval of information. Library Trends: 301–308.
(1955). “Storage and Retrieval of Information by Means of the Association of Ideas.” American Documentation 6 (January): 1–18.
(1953-1956).Studies in Coordinate Indexing. Washington, D.C.: 1953–1959.[3]
(1952). “Possibilities for Cooperative Work in Subject Controls.” American Documentation 3 (January): 21–28.
(1950). “Cataloging of Publications of Corporate Authors.” Library Quarterly 20 (April): 1–20.
(1948). “Memorandum for a Conference on Bibliographical Control of Government Scientific and Technical Reports.” Special Libraries 39 (May): 154–60.
(1936).(2017). Causation Freedom and Determinism : An Attempt to Solve the Causal Problem through a Study of Its Origins in Seventeenth-Century Philosophy. London: Routledge.
^ abShera, Jesse H. (1978). "Mortimer Taube". In Wynar, Bohdan S. (ed.). Dictionary of American Library Biography. Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited. pp. 512–13.
^ abLeonard Kniffel; Peggy Sullivan; Edith McCormick (1999). 100 of the Most Important Leaders We had in the 20th Century. American Libraries. p. 38.
^Taube Mortimer (1962). "Experiments with the IBM-9900 and a Discussion of an Improved COMAC as Suggested by These Experiments". Journal of Chemical Documentation. 2 (1): 22–26. doi:10.1021/c160004a007.
^Keitty Rodrigues and Karpinski Cezar. 2021. “Epistemology in Information Science: Mortimer Taube’s Vision.” Investigación Bibliotecológica 185–206.
Garvey Shunryu Colin. 2021. “The ‘General Problem Solver’ Does Not Exist: Mortimer Taube and the Art of AI Criticism.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing: 60–73.
Osborn Andrew D. 1991. “From Cutter and Dewey to Mortimer Taube and Beyond a Complete Century of Change in Cataloguing and Classification.” Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 35–50.