Social epistemology, "the production, distribution, and utilization of intellectual products" (Egan and Shera 1952), correlates the production and consumption of information to that of material goods. Shera later wrote that social
epistemology "is the study of knowledge in society," distinct from previous investigations of individual
knowledge. Furner (2004) lists the following contributions made in "Foundations of a Theory of Bibliography": • Establishing "informed social action" as the goal of library service. • Establishing the extent to which librarianship contributes to attaining this goal as "the primary criterion by which [bibliographic services] may be evaluated." • Providing "a theoretical framework … for the study of
information-seeking behavior, knowledge organization, and
bibliometrics", which is then treated as "a theoretical foundation for
library and
information science." • Using the term "
social epistemology" in this context for the first time. ==Errors of attribution==