The son of the
chemical engineer Julius Lewkowitsch, Farradane graduated in chemistry in 1929 at what is now
Imperial College London and started work in industry as a chemist and documentalist. After working in research at the
Ministry of Supply and the
Admiralty during
World War II, he first made an impact with a paper on the scientific approach to documentation at a
Royal Society Scientific Information Conference in 1948. Farradane is accredited for first use of the term
information science, in which he recognized library science and information science as disparate, yet joint areas of study. He was instrumental in establishing the
Institute of Information Scientists in 1958 and the first academic courses in information science in 1963, at what eventually became
City University, London and where he became Director of the Centre for Information Science in 1966. Of Central European origin, his commitment to science was reflected in the name he created for himself – a combination of
Faraday and
Haldane, two scientists he particularly admired. On the research side his main contributions lay in relational analysis, a precursor to work in the area of
artificial intelligence, and the concept of information. ==Awards==