I'm fully aware that the precise quantification is impossible. What I look for are approximations, like that of Georges Anderla, who took all the human knowledge in the year 1 AD as a unit and then made a study of the estimated decrease in the time necessary for it doubling, but I need similar data specified across particular scientific disciplines.
Now, I must presume that the quantity of facts stored in an individual's memory doesn't change much with time and progress (Thomas K. Landauer made a nice study about the estimate of "bits in the brain" used for storing learned facts and came up with 10**9 bits) so, as the scope of the knowledge broadens, an expert will hold in his memory the ever diminishing percentage of the whole quantity of knowledge in his specialized field.
I would like to know some estimated figures (not necessarily the newest ones, in fact, the historic ones would be very useful for comparison), I'm sure they must exist somewhere.
Thanks,
Hrvoje
Merged post follows:
Consecutive posts mergedIn order to make a things more clear, I would like to show an example of what I need (the numbers are fully arbitrary, of course):
"20 most significant world historic institutions have the libraries with 10**5 different volumes (different translations are not important and two works in different languages are considered one and the same work) containing in total 10**15 bits of information.
Those knowledge represents the vast majority of the facts that historiography in the world (bar the special projects that could be deemed sub-disciplines) uses and most historians would rarely have to venture far outside those information.
Now, a good historian had, during his lifetime, memorized 10**8 out of those 10**15."
This is the type of information I need, I would need a study that would put the "real" numbers instead of those I arbitrary inserted.
Thanks,
Hrvoje