While deep encyclopedic knowledge across numerous fields of inquiry by a single person is no longer feasible, encyclopedic knowledge within a field of inquiry or topic has great historical precedent and is still often ascribed to individuals. For example, it has been said of
Raphael Lemkin that "his knowledge of the logic behind the Nazi war machine was encyclopedic." In 1900,
Alexander Graham Bell, who set out to read the entire
Encyclopædia Britannica himself, served as the second president of the
National Geographic Society and declared the Society should cover "the world and all that is in it." While this goal sounds all-encompassing, it is in fact a statement towards comprehensive
geographic knowledge, meaning the scope of the National Geographic Society's enterprise should attempt to be terrestrially unbounded. In an era of specialization, be it
academic, functional, or epistemological, obtaining
domain-specific encyclopedic knowledge as an
expert is typically celebrated and often rewarded by institutions in modern society. (This appreciation for having extensive niche knowledge, however, should not be confused with the historical experimentation and debate surrounding the
division of labor which has been argued to limit the knowledge of workers compelled to perform repetitive tasks for the sake of an overall increase in economic productivity.) ==Views==