Bologna, Italy

Digital Humanities and Digital Knowledge

Master's
Table of contents

Digital Humanities and Digital Knowledge at University of Bologna

Language: EnglishStudies in English
Subject area: humanities
University website: www.unibo.it

Definitions and quotes

Digital
Digital usually refers to something using digits, particularly binary digits.
Digital Humanities
Digital humanities (DH) is an area of scholarly activity at the intersection of computing or digital technologies and the disciplines of the humanities. It includes the systematic use of digital resources in the humanities, as well as the reflection on their application. DH can be defined as new ways of doing scholarship that involve collaborative, transdisciplinary, and computationally engaged research, teaching, and publishing. It brings digital tools and methods to the study of the humanities with the recognition that the printed word is no longer the main medium for knowledge production and distribution.
Humanities
Humanities are academic disciplines that study aspects of human society and culture. In the renaissance, the term contrasted with divinity and referred to what is now called classics, the main area of secular study in universities at the time. Today, the humanities are more frequently contrasted with natural, and sometimes social, sciences as well as professional training.
Knowledge
Knowledge is a familiarity, awareness, or understanding of someone or something, such as facts, information, descriptions, or skills, which is acquired through experience or education by perceiving, discovering, or learning.
Knowledge
All teaching and all intellectual learning come about from already existing knowledge.
Aristotle, Posterior Analytics (71a 1), tr. by Jonathan Barnes (1984/95) Other translations of this quote: All doctrine, and all intellectual discipline, arise from pre-existent knowledge, O.F. Owen (1853) All communications of knowledge from teacher to pupil by way of reasoning pre-suppose some pre-existing knowledge., E.S. Bouchier (1901) All instruction given or received by way of argument proceeds from pre-existent knowledge, G.R.G. Mure (1928). Other translations of this quote:
Knowledge
Minime sibi quisque notus est, et difficillime de se quisque sentit.
Every one is least known to himself, and it is very difficult for a man to know himself.
Knowledge
'Tain't a knowin' kind of cattle
Thet is ketched with mouldy corn.
James Russell Lowell, The Biglow Papers, No. 1, line 3. Quote reported in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922), p. 419-23.
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