Five Laws of Library Science by Dr S. R. Ranganathan पुस्तकालय विज्ञान के पाँच सूत्र.

 

Five Laws of Library Science by Dr. S. R. Ranganathan.






Hey Library professionals, In this video i'll explain you about five laws of library science by S. R. Ranganthan 1931. पुस्तकालय विज्ञान के पाँच सूत्र प्रसिद्ध पुस्तकालयविज्ञानी डॉ शियाली रामामृत रंगनाथन द्वारा प्रस्तुत सिद्धान्त हैं। उन्होंने सन् १९२८ में पुस्तकालय विज्ञान के इन पाँच नियमों का प्रतिपादन किया था-
  1. पुस्तकें उपयोग के लिए हैं।
  2. प्रत्येक पाठक को उसकी पुस्तक उपलब्ध हो।
  3. प्रत्येक पुस्तक को उसका पाठक मिले।
  4. पाठक का समय बचाये
  5. पुस्तकालय संवर्धनशील संस्था है।

  1. First Law: Books Are For Use
  2. 2nd Law: Every Reader His/Her Book
  3. Third Law: Every Book Its Reader
  4. 4t Law: Save The Time Of The Reader
  5. The Library Is A Growing Organism Dr. Shiyali Ramamritra Ranganathan (1892-1972) was an inventor, educator, philosopher, mathematician, and universal librarian. He made several significant contributions to the library profession. A fundamental contribution made by him is the Five Laws of Library Science.
He formulated the Five Laws of Library Science in 1928 and published these in his famous book entitled, “Five Laws of Library Science” in 1931. He owes the First Law to Prof. Edward N. Ross, his mathematics teacher, and the other laws were enunciated by Ranganathan himself. In this lesson, we will discuss the basic philosophy of these laws and their implementation in library operations and activities.
The Five Laws of Library Science are the most influential concept in the field of library science. They are fundamental and discuss the basic philosophy of library science. They concisely represent the ideal services and organizational philosophy of all types of libraries, even today. These laws provide a scientific basis and general principles which serve as guidelines to librarians in organizing and managing information products and services. The Five Laws given by Ranganathan are:
1. Books are for use. 2. Every reader his book. 3. Every book its a reader. 4. Save the time of the reader. 5. Library is a growing organism. These laws convey the fundamental philosophy of library science and convey a deep understanding of libraries. The basic tenet of these laws is to unite users with their desired information

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