A short history of knowledge, from feudalism to the internet.

Crowdsourcing as an idea isn't anything new, says historian and sex researcher Alice Dreger. She tells us about the history of public gathering of information from the medieval era to today. The enlightenment period was a big boon to the arts and sciences, but also an even bigger help to how kn...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Video
Language:English
Language Notes:In English.
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : Big Think, 2018.
Series:Academic Video Online
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this streaming video (Alexander Street Press)
Description
Summary:Crowdsourcing as an idea isn't anything new, says historian and sex researcher Alice Dreger. She tells us about the history of public gathering of information from the medieval era to today. The enlightenment period was a big boon to the arts and sciences, but also an even bigger help to how knowledge is organized and distributed. Is Wikipedia, with its checks and balances and appeal to honesty, more like the founding fathers' idea of America than the overtly libertarian wild west that the rest of the internet has turned into? It might seem like a leap, but Alice's position here is full of interesting suggestions like that. Alice's new book is Galileo's Middle Finger: Heretics, Activists, and One Scholar's Search for Justice.
Item Description:Title from resource description page (viewed July 5, 2022).
Physical Description:1 online resource (5 minutes)
Playing Time:00:04:05