

Alphabetical Order
9 snips Dec 1, 2021
Judith Flanders, author of "A Place for Everything," explores the history and evolution of alphabetical order. She discusses how, in ancient Rome and medieval Europe, information was organized differently—often by memory aids like chronology or geography. Flanders reveals the cultural shifts that made alphabetical arrangement a default in modern times. The conversation also dives into Melville Dewey's legacy, including the quirks and controversies surrounding the Dewey Decimal System, and how it still shapes libraries today.
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Olympic Parade Order Mix-Up
- NBC aired Olympic Parade of Nations footage out of order after the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
- The parade was ordered by stroke count in countries’ Chinese names, not alphabetically, confusing Western networks.
Alphabetical Order's Recent Rise
- Alphabetical order is a relatively recent development in information organization.
- Its adoption marks a shift in learning, thought organization, and worldview.
From Pictograms to Syllabaries
- Early writing used pictograms representing whole concepts, requiring many symbols.
- Syllabaries, using symbols for syllables, simplified this but still weren't alphabets.