Article ID: CBB200451751

Cultivating Chaos: Entropy, Information, and the Making of the Dictionary of National Biography (2022)

unapi

The Dictionary of National Biography, published between 1885 and 1900, was one of Britain's biggest cyclopedia projects. The rampant expansion of the nation's archives, private collections, and museums produced an abundance of materials that frustrated the dictionary's editors, Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee, especially because methodologies for making order of such materials were underdeveloped. Adding to their frustration was the sense of impending doom felt generally in Britain after the discovery of the second law of thermodynamics in 1859. Entropy put an end to the presiding belief in the infinite energy that fueled Britain's economic development and therefore challenged Victorian biography's premise that the capacity for self-development was boundless. Like the physicists of the era, these dictionary makers searched for ways to circumvent entropy's deadening force and reenergize their world. This project would not actually be achieved, however, until the twentieth century when Claude Shannon published his “Information Theory” in 1948. I argue that in an attempt to get out from under the chaos of information overload, the editors of the DNB invented new methods to organize information that anticipated Shannon's revolutionary theory and changed the way that we think, write, and work.

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Authors & Contributors
Smith, Roger C.
Alexander, Sarah C.
Francesco Ghelli
Wisniak, Jaime
Tondre, Michael L.
Thurtle, Phillip
Concepts
Science and culture
Science and literature
Entropy
Thermodynamics
Physics
Science and economics
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
Early modern
20th century
17th century
Places
Great Britain
England
London (England)
United States
Institutions
Polytechnic Touring Association
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