Tacit and Explicit Knowledge Quotes
Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
by
Harry Collins66 ratings, 3.79 average rating, 4 reviews
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Tacit and Explicit Knowledge Quotes
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“once a thing is committed to writing it circulates equally among those who understand the subject and those who have no business with it; a writing cannot distinguish between suitable and unsuitable readers. And if it is ill-treated or unfairly abused it always needs its parent to come to its rescue; it is quite incapable of defending or helping itself. (Socrates, in Plato, Phaedrus, 275d5-275e5)”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“If one is concerned with the transmission of knowledge between humans, one must be concerned, willy-nilly, with what is fixed.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“Everything that has been discovered during these decades about the degree of indeterminacy in the interpretation of a string remains true and a central, and a still unresolved puzzle, is how there can be any fixedness at all.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“There is, then, nothing strange about things being done but not being told-it is normal life. What is strange is that anything can be told.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“What the mistaken claim that all knowledge is tacit does indicate is that, mostly, explicit knowledge is harder to understand than tacit knowledge. Most writing on tacit knowledge takes it to be the other way around. Though the tension between tacit and explicit goes back at least as far as the Greeks, it was modernism in general and the computer revolution in particular that made the explicit seem easy and the tacit seem obscure.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“The mistake is to believe that understanding human experience is the route to understanding knowledge. Rather, to understand human experience one must start by trying to understand all the things that might count as knowledge and then work out how humans might use them. The growth of automation has provided new problems and more demanding questions about what knowledge might be even though it remains the case that, in the last resort, humans are the only knowers.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“A lot of it is a matter of stating the obvious-but stating the obvious is not always easy when one begins with a confused domain.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“studies of science that began in the 1970s revealed that even the paradigm of explicit knowledge-scientific data or the algebraic expressions of theory-can be understood only against a background of tacit knowledge. This has revealed that the idea of the explicit is much more complicated than was once believed.”
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
― Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
