Lucy's Cafe and Knowledge: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
The Anomebot2 (talk | contribs)
Adding geodata: {{coord missing|United States}}
 
remove link to non notable site
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Refimprove|date=July 2007}}
'''Lucy's Cafe''' was an Italian restaurant located in [[Hershey]], [[Pennsylvania]] that was family owned and operated for more than 75 years.<ref name="closing">[http://blog.pennlive.com/go/2007/10/lucy.html Lucy's farewell - Go! With The Patriot-News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The restaurant's meat balls were a home-made recipe that were popular throughout Pennsylvania, and were at one time sold at [[Hershey Bears]] hockey games.<ref name="bears">[http://www.hersheypa.com/events/giant_center/about_concessions.html Concessions<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
{{otheruses}}
[[Image:Efez Celsus Library 5 RB.jpg|thumb|Personification of knowledge ([[Greek language|Greek]] ''Επιστημη'', [[Episteme]]) in [[Celsus Library]] in [[Ephesus]], Turkey.]]
'''Knowledge''' is defined ([[Oxford English Dictionary]]) variously as (i) expertise, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject, (ii) what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information or (iii) awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation. Philosophical debates in general start with Plato's formulation of knowledge as "justified true belief". There is however no single agreed definition of knowledge presently, nor any prospect of one, and there remain numerous competing theories.


Knowledge acquisition involves complex [[Cognition|cognitive]] processes: perception, learning, communication, association and [[reasoning]]. The term ''knowledge'' is also used to mean the confident [[understanding]] of a subject with the ability to use it for a specific purpose if appropriate.
== History ==
[[Image:LucysCafeHersheySign.JPG|thumb|right|350px|The former sign of Lucy's Cafe]]
Lucy's Cafe was founded by sisters Josephine Fromboluti and Lucia Santoro, after their immigration from Italy. <ref name="gutted">[http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2008/01/firefighters_called_to_former.html Blaze demolishes site of popular Hershey restaurant - Midstate PA Local News, Weather, Sports & Entertainment - PennLive.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The restaurant's ownership shifted throughout the 20th century, before being acquired by its final owner, Tony Tatangelo, in the 1970s. Tatangelo, Fromboluti's grandson, was the third generation of the family to own the restaurant. <ref name="gutted">gutted</ref>


==Defining knowledge (philosophy)==
Lucy's Cafe was visited throughout the years by many celebrities, such as [[Joe Paterno]],<ref name="gutted">gutted</ref> [[Michael Bolton|Micheal Bolton]],<ref name="gutted">gutted</ref> [[Jim Kelly]], [[Lynn Swann]],<ref name="gutted">gutted</ref> and many more. The restaurant also was visited annually by players and coaches of the [[Big 33|Big 33 Football Classic]].
[[Image:Knowledge-Reid-Highsmith.jpeg|thumb|left|[[Robert Reid (painter)|Robert Reid]], ''Knowledge'' (1896). [[Thomas Jefferson Building]], Washington, D.C.]]
{{seealso|epistemology}}
{{cquote2
|We suppose ourselves to possess unqualified scientific knowledge of a thing, as opposed to knowing it in the accidental way in which the sophist knows, when we think that we know the cause on which the fact depends, as the cause of that fact and of no other, and, further, that the fact could not be other than it is. Now that scientific knowing is something of this sort is evident &mdash; witness both those who falsely claim it and those who actually possess it, since the former merely imagine themselves to be, while the latter are also actually, in the condition described. Consequently the proper object of unqualified scientific knowledge is something which cannot be other than it is.|[[Aristotle]]|''[[Posterior Analytics]]'' (Book 1 Part 2)}}</blockquote>


The definition of knowledge is a matter of on-going [[debate]] among [[philosopher]]s in the field of [[epistemology]]. The classical definition, described but not ultimately endorsed by, [[Plato]]<ref>In Plato's ''[[Theaetetus (dialogue)|Theaetetus]]'', Socrates and Theaetetus discuss three definitions of ''knowledge'': knowledge as nothing but perception, knowledge as true judgment, and, finally, knowledge as a true judgment with an account. Each of these definitions is shown to be unsatisfactory.</ref>, has it that in order for there to be knowledge ''at least'' three [[criteria]] must be fulfilled; that in order to count as knowledge, a [[statement]] must be [[theory of justification|justified]], [[truth|true]], and [[belief|believed]]. Some claim that these conditions are not sufficient, as [[Gettier case]] examples allegedly demonstrate. There are a number of alternatives proposed, including [[Robert Nozick]]'s arguments for a requirement that knowledge 'tracks the truth' and [[Simon Blackburn|Simon Blackburn's]] additional requirement that we do not want to say that those who meet any of these conditions 'through a defect, flaw, or failure' have knowledge. [[Richard Kirkham]] suggests that our definition of knowledge requires that the believer's evidence is such that it logically necessitates the truth of the belief.{{Fact|date=January 2008}}
==== Purchase by Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company ====


In contrast to this approach, [[Ludwig Wittgenstein|Wittgenstein]] observed, following [[Moore's paradox]], that one can say "He believes it, but it isn't so", but not "He knows it, but it isn't so". <ref>[[Ludwig Wittgenstein]], ''[[On Certainty]]'', remark 42</ref> He goes on to argue that these do not correspond to distinct mental states, but rather to distinct ways of talking about conviction. What is different here is not the mental state of the speaker, but the activity in which they are engaged. For example, on this account, to ''know'' that the kettle is boiling is not to be in a particular state of mind, but to perform a particular task with the statement that the kettle is boiling. Wittgenstein sought to bypass the difficulty of definition by looking to the way "knowledge" is used in natural languages. He saw knowledge as a case of a [[family resemblance]].
In October 2007, local newspapers confirmed rumored reports that Lucy's Cafe had been sold.<ref name="closing">[http://blog.pennlive.com/go/2007/10/lucy.html Lucy's farewell - Go! With The Patriot-News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The purchase was made by [[Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company]] (also known as HERCO).<ref name="gutted">gutted</ref> Coincidentally, Lucy's Cafe had formerly sold meatballs to the [[GIANT Center]], home arena of the [[Hershey Bears]] (an [[AHL]] team owned by [[Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company|HERCO]]), for sale at the team's games. The restaurant's final day of business was December 31, 2007.<ref name="closing">[http://blog.pennlive.com/go/2007/10/lucy.html Lucy's farewell - Go! With The Patriot-News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Reliable Knowledge==
On January 21, 2008, a fire damaged much of the building that was once Lucy's Cafe.<ref name="gutted">[http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2008/01/firefighters_called_to_former.html Blaze demolishes site of popular Hershey restaurant - Midstate PA Local News, Weather, Sports & Entertainment - PennLive.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The cause of the fire has not officially been determined, but plans for the sale to [[Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company|HERCO]] have not been deterred.<ref name="gutted">[http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2008/01/firefighters_called_to_former.html Blaze demolishes site of popular Hershey restaurant - Midstate PA Local News, Weather, Sports & Entertainment - PennLive.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
In ''An Introduction to Logic and Scientific Method'' (1934), [[Morris Raphael Cohen|Morris R. Cohen]] and [[Ernest Nagel]] reviewed the pursuit of truth as determined by logical considerations. They reviewed ways of eliminating doubt and arriving at stable beliefs or reliable knowledge, such as
* The method of authority
* The method of intuition
* The methods of experimental inquiry:
** Types of invariant relations
** The experimental method in general
** The method of agreement
** The method of difference{{Fact|date=August 2007}}
** The joint method of agreement and difference
** The method of concomitant variation
** The doctrine of the uniformity of nature
** The plurality of causes


Their final conclusion was, "Scientific method we declare as the most assured technique man has yet devised for controlling the flux of things and establishing stable beliefs."
== Lucy's Cafe Meat Sauce and Meatballs ==


In an essay entitled "Inductive Method and Scientific Discovery," Marcello Pera said, "In the first place, the [[scientific method]] is a ''procedure'', a general strategy that indicates an ordered sequence of moves (or steps) which the scientist has to make (or go through) in order to reach the goal of his research." (In ''On Scientific Discovery'', edited by Grmek, Cohen, and Cimino [1977], published in the Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Series.) The scientific method is not a method directly applied, but rather a guide to the mental activity stages of originating, refining, extending, and applying knowledge. It is subject neutral and flexible in use; it is thus suitable for all domains.
Lucy's Cafe was known regionally<ref name ="Gleiter">Gleiter, Sue. [http://www.patriot-news.com "Lucy's Cafe Prepares to Close at Year's End"], [[The Patriot-News]], Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, [[2007]]-[[10-03]], pp. D01.</ref> for its meat sauce and hand-rolled meatballs, which were sold both in the restaurant with meals and "to go" in container sizes ranging from quart to gallon.


Statements about truth must be viewed skeptically. Rather than state something as "true," the following phrase should be used: "On the evidence available today the balance of probability favors the view that..." .<ref>[[V. Gordon Childe]], ''Man Makes Himself'', 1936.</ref>
The meatballs were so well known that for several years they were sold at [[Hershey Bears]]' (an [[American Hockey League]] team) home games.<ref name="bears" />


The literature contains hundreds of formulas for the scientific method. They are basically the same but differ in length and terminology. In an article "Suggestions for Teaching the Scientific Method" published in the March 1961 issue of ''American Biology Teacher'', Dr. Kenneth B.M. Crooks suggested this one:
The recipe for the sauce and meatballs remains a family secret. During the restaurant's final month of business, sales of the famed meat sauce and meatballs boomed. Currently, there is no way to purchase the sauce or meatballs, and the recipe has not been published. During the restaurant's final weeks, owner Tony Tatangelo hinted that the meat sauce and meatballs may be available in the future, but official plans for any future sales were not immediately announced announced.<ref name ="Gleiter"> </ref>


# Curiosity
====Current Sales of Lucy's Cafe Meat Sauce and Meatballs====
# Is there a problem?
# Get the evidence
# Attributes needed
# Weigh all evidence
# Make the educated guess (hypothesis)
# Challenge the hypothesis
# Get a conclusion
# Suspend judgment
# Deductive reasoning


==Communicating knowledge==
On April 9th, 2008, the sale of Lucy's Cafe Meat Sauce and Meatballs resumed<ref name ="Gleiter2">Gleiter, Sue. http://www.pennlive.com/columns/patriotnews/gleiter/index.ssf?/base/columnists/1207618825101930.xml&coll=1&thispage=2</ref>. The Meat Sauce and Meatballs can be purchased from Bricker's Pizza and Restaurant, [[Hershey]], [[Pennsylvania]].<ref name ="Gleiter2"> </ref> Bricker's Pizza and Restaurant is located less than one block from the former location of Lucy's Cafe.
[[Symbolic representation]]s can be used to indicate meaning and can be thought of as a dynamic process. Hence the transfer of the symbolic representation can be viewed as one [[wikt:ascription|ascription]] process whereby knowledge can be transferred. Other forms of communication include imitation, narrative exchange along with a range of other methods. There is no complete theory of knowledge transfer or communication.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

While many would agree that one of the most universal and significant tools for the transfer of knowledge is writing (of many kinds), argument over the usefulness of the written word exists however, with some scholars skeptical of its impact on societies. In his novel ''Technopoly'' Neil Postman demonstrates the argument against the use of writing through an excerpt from Plato's work ''[[Phaedrus]]'' (Postman, Neil (1992) ''Technopoly'', Vintage, New York, pp 73). In this excerpt the scholar Socrates recounts the story of Thamus, the Egyptian king and Theuth the inventor of the written word. In this story, Theuth presents his new invention "writing" to King Thamus, telling Thamus that his new invention "will improve both the wisdom and memory of the Egyptians" (Postman, Neil (1992) Technopoly, Vintage, New York, pp 74). King Thamus is skeptical of this new invention and rejects it as a tool of recollection rather than retained knowledge. He argues that the written word will infect the Egyptian people with fake knowledge as they will be able to attain facts and stories from an external source and will no longer be forced to mentally retain large quantities of knowledge themselves (Postman, Neil (1992) ''Technopoly'', Vintage, New York ,pp 74).

Andrew Robinson also highlights, in his work ''The Origins of Writing'', the possibility for writing to be used to spread false information and there for the ability of the written word to decrease social knowledge (Robinson, Andrew (2003) ''The Origins of Writing'' in Crowley and Heyer (eds) Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society, Boston pp 34). People are often internalizing new information which they perceive to be knowledge but are in reality fill their minds with false knowledge.

==Situated knowledge==
Situated knowledge is knowledge specific to a particular situation. Imagine two very similar breeds of mushroom, which grow on either side of a mountain, one nutritious, one poisonous. Relying on knowledge from one side of an ecological boundary, after crossing to the other, may lead to starving rather than eating perfectly healthy food near at hand, or to poisoning oneself by mistake. {{Fact|date=September 2007}}

Some methods of generating knowledge, such as [[trial and error]], or learning from [[experience]], tend to create highly situational knowledge. One of the main benefits of the [[scientific method]] is that the theories it generates are much less situational than knowledge gained by other methods.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}
Situational knowledge is often embedded in language, culture, or traditions.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

Knowledge generated through experience is called knowledge "a posteriori", meaning afterwards. The pure existence of a term like "a posteriori" means this also has a counterpart. In this case that is knowledge "a priori", meaning before. The knowledge prior to any experience means that there are certain "assumptions" that one takes for granted. For example if one is being told about a [[chair]] it is clear to him that the chair is in [[space]], that it is [[three dimensional space|3D]]. This knowledge is not knowledge that one can "forget", even someone suffering from amnesia experiences the world in 3D. See also: ''[[A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)|A priori and a posteriori]]''.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

==Partial knowledge==
One discipline of [[epistemology]] focuses on partial knowledge. In most realistic cases, it is not possible to have an exhaustive understanding of an information domain, so then we have to live with the fact that our knowledge is always ''not complete'', that is, partial. Most real problems have to be solved by taking advantage of a partial understanding of the problem context and problem data. That is very different from the typical simple math problems that we solve at school, where all data are given and we have a perfect understanding of formulas necessary to solve them.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

==Knowledge management==
{{main|Knowledge management}}
Knowledge management is a [[management]] [[theory]] which emerged in the 1990s. It seeks to understand the way in which knowledge is created, used and shared within organizations. A significant part of Knowledge Management theory and practice aligns two models: (i) the [[DIKW]] model, which places data, information, knowledge and [[wisdom]] into an increasingly useful pyramid. (ii) Nonaka's reformulation of [[Michael Polanyi|Polanyi]]'s distinction between [[tacit knowledge|tacit]] and [[explicit knowledge]]. Both of these models are increasingly under challenge with different schools of thought emerging which are more fully described and referenced in the main article.

An objective of mainstream knowledge management is to ensure that the ''right'' information is delivered to the ''right'' person just in time, in order to take the most appropriate decision. In that sense, knowledge management is not interested in managing knowledge ''per se'', but to relate knowledge and its usage. This leads to [[Organizational Memory System]]s. More recent developments have focused on managing networks (the flow of knowledge rather than knowledge itself) and narrative forms of knowledge exchange.

==Philosophers versus Biologists: — "Knowledge" of two types==
This article deals chiefly with "knowledge" in its traditional form as viewed by philosophers, but it may be helpful to be aware of a broader usage which has been developing within biology/psychology—discussed elsewhere as [[meta-epistemology]], or [[genetic epistemology]], and to some extent related to "[[theory of cognitive development]]". &nbsp; &nbsp; [Note that "[[Epistemology]]" is the study of knowledge and how it is acquired.]

Until recent times, at least in the Western tradition, it was simply taken for granted that knowledge was something possessed by humans—or God alone—and probably ''adult'' humans at that. Sometimes the notion might stretch to (ii)&nbsp;''Society-as-such'', as in (e.g.) "the knowledge possessed by the Coptic culture" (as opposed to its individual members), but that was not assured either. Nor was it usual to consider ''unconscious'' knowledge in any systematic way until this approach was popularized by [[Sigmund Freud|Freud]].
<ref>There is quite a good case for this exclusive specialization used by philosophers, in that it allows for in-depth study of logic-procedures and other abstractions which are not found elsewhere. However this may lead to problems whenever the topic spills over into those excluded domains—e.g. when Kant (following Newton) dismissed ''Space and Time'' as axiomatically "transcendental" and "a priori" — a claim later disproved by [[Jean Piaget|Piaget's]] clinical studies. It also seems likely that the vexed problem of "''[[infinite regress]]''" can be largely (but not completely) solved by proper attention to how unconscious concepts are ''actually'' developed, both during infantile learning ''and'' as inherited "pseudo-transcendentals" inherited from the trial-and-error of previous generations. See also "[[Tacit knowledge]]".
* [[Jean Piaget|Piaget, J.]], and B.Inhelder (1927 / 1969). ''The child's conception of time''. Routledge & Kegan Paul: London.
* Piaget, J., and B.Inhelder (1948 / 1956). ''The child's conception of space''. Routledge & Kegan Paul: London.</ref>

Other biological domains where "knowledge" might be said to reside, include: (iii) the ''immune system'', and (iv) in the ''DNA of the genetic code''. See the list of four "epistemological domains": &nbsp; [[Karl Popper|Popper]], (1975)<ref>[[Karl Popper|Popper, K.R.]] (1975). "The rationality of scientific revolutions"; in Rom Harré (ed.), ''Problems of Scientific Revolution: Scientific Progress and Obstacles to Progress in the Sciences''. Clarendon Press: Oxford.</ref>; and Traill (2008 [http://www.ondwelle.com/OSM02.pdf]: Table&nbsp;S, page&nbsp;31)—also references by both to [[Niels Kaj Jerne|Niels Jerne]].

Such considerations seem to call for a separate definition of "knowledge" to cover these more-general systems:

===Defining knowledge (biology)===
Knowledge is not just [[information]]. It must be usefully ''available'' to the system, though that system need not be conscious. Thus the criteria seem to be:
* The system should apparently be dynamic and self-organizing (unlike a mere book ''on its own'').
* The knowledge must constitute some sort of representation of "the outside world"<ref>This "outside world" could include other subsystems within the same organism—e.g. different "mental levels" corresponding to different Piagetian stages. See [[Theory of cognitive development]].</ref>, or ways of dealing with it (directly or indirectly).
* There must be some way for the system to access this information quickly enough for it to be useful.

==Religious meaning of knowledge==
In many expressions of [[Christianity]], such as [[Catholicism]] and [[Anglicanism]], knowledge is one of the [[seven gifts of the Holy Spirit]].<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.scborromeo.org/ccc/p3s1c1a7.htm#1831
|title=Part Three, No. 1831
|work=Catechism of the Catholic Church
|accessdate=2007-04-20}}</ref>

In Islam, the prophet [[Muhammad]] has described himself and his vicergeant [[Ali]] as the sources of knowledge: "I am the City of Knowledge and Ali is its Gate".

<!-- The following should be easy to reference. Please note where to find this in Hindu scripture. -->
Hindu Scriptures present two kinds of knowledge, ''Paroksha Gnyana'' and ''Aporoksha Gnyana''. ''Paroksha Gnyana'' (also spelled ''Paroksha-Jnana'') is secondhand knowledge: knowledge obtained from books, hearsay, etc. ''Aporoksha Gnyana'' (also spelled ''Aparoksha-Jnana'') is the knowledge borne of direct experience, i.e., knowledge that one discovers for oneself.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.swami-krishnananda.org/panch/panch_07.html
|title=Chapter 7
|work=The Philosophy of the Panchadasi
|author= Swami Krishnananda
|publisher= The Divine Life Society
|accessdate=2008-07-05}}</ref>

The [[Old Testament]]'s [[Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil]] contained the knowledge that separated Man from God: "And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil…" ({{bibleverse||Genesis|3:22|KJV}})

In [[Gnosticism]] divine knowledge or [[gnosis]] is hoped to be attained and escape from the [[demiurge]]'s physical world. And in [[Thelema]] knowledge and conversation with one's Holy Guardian Angel is the purpose of life, which is similar to Gnosis or enlightenment in other mystery religions.

==See also==
* [[Analytic proposition]]/[[Synthetic proposition]]
* [[A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)|A priori/A posteriori]]
* [[Belief]]
* [[Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities]]
* [[DIKW]]
* [[Epistemic logic]]
* [[Epistemology]]
* [[Figurative system of human knowledge]]
* [[Institutional knowledge]]
* [[Intelligence]]
* [[Intuition]] as an [[Unconscious mind|unconscious]] form of knowledge.
* [[Knowledge capture]]
* [[Knowledge discovery]]
* [[Knowledge engineering]]
* [[Knowledge management]]
* [[Knowledge networking]]
* [[Knowledge relativity]]
* [[Knowledge representation]]
* [[Knowledge retrieval]]
* [[Learning]]
* [[Metaknowledge]]
* [[Philosophical skepticism]]
* [[Procedural knowledge]]
* [[Propædia]] (outline of human knowledge)
* [[Propositional knowledge]]
* [[Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge]]
* [[Tacit knowledge]]
* [[Theory of Knowledge]]
* [[Truth]]
* [[Knowledge is Power]]
* [[Objectivist epistemology]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==External links==
{{sisterlinks|Knowledge}}
* [http://www.intellecttoday.org IntellectToday] - An Organization that works to further research and development in the fields of science and knowledge.
* [http://www.wkdnews.org World Knowledge Dialogue Symposium] - An initiative to bridge the gap between the natural and the human/social sciences.
* [http://www.princeton.edu/~jimpryor/courses/epist/notes/gettier.html Theory of Knowledge: The Gettier problem]
* [http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu Knowledge@Wharton] - aimed to offer free access to course materials for students, teachers, and self-learners
* [http://knowledge.insead.edu INSEAD Knowledge] - showcases INSEAD's business research with articles and podcasts.
* [http://www.imprint.co.uk/C&HK/cyber.htm Cybernetics & Human Knowing] - A Journal of Second-Order [[Cybernetics]], [[Autopoiesis]] & [[Cyber-Semiotics]]
* [http://www.oikos.org/vGknowl.htm The Incommensurability of Scientific and Poetic Knowledge]
* [http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/WBI/WBIPROGRAMS/KFDLP/0,,menuPK:461238~pagePK:64156143~piPK:64154155~theSitePK:461198,00.html Knowledge for Development Program] - World Bank Institute


{{Philosophy topics}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Epistemology]]
{{coord missing|United States}}
[[Category:Knowledge| ]]
[[Category:Philosophical terminology]]


[[ar:معرفة]]
[[Category:Restaurants in Pennsylvania]]
[[az:Bilik]]
[[bn:জ্ঞান]]
[[zh-min-nan:Tì-sek]]
[[be-x-old:Веды]]
[[bs:Znanje]]
[[ca:Coneixement]]
[[da:Viden]]
[[de:Wissen]]
[[et:Teadmine]]
[[el:Γνώση]]
[[es:Conocimiento]]
[[eo:Scio]]
[[fa:دانش]]
[[fr:Connaissance]]
[[fr:Savoir]]
[[gl:Coñecemento]]
[[ko:지식]]
[[hi:ज्ञान]]
[[hr:Znanje]]
[[id:Pengetahuan]]
[[is:Þekking]]
[[it:Conoscenza]]
[[he:ידע]]
[[ku:Zanîn]]
[[la:Scientia]]
[[lb:Wëssen]]
[[lv:Zināšanas]]
[[lt:Žinios]]
[[hu:Ismeret]]
[[mk:Знаење]]
[[nl:Kennis]]
[[new:ज्ञान]]
[[ja:知識]]
[[no:Kunnskap]]
[[nn:Kunnskap]]
[[pl:Wiedza]]
[[pt:Conhecimento]]
[[ru:Знание]]
[[sq:Dituria]]
[[scn:Canuscenza]]
[[simple:Knowledge]]
[[sk:Vedenie (filozofia)]]
[[sl:Znanje]]
[[sr:Знање]]
[[sh:Znanje]]
[[su:Pangaweruh]]
[[fi:Tieto]]
[[sv:Kunskap]]
[[ta:அறிவு]]
[[th:ความรู้]]
[[vi:Tri thức]]
[[tr:Bilgi]]
[[tl:Kaalaman]]
[[uk:Знання]]
[[yi:וויסן]]
[[zh-yue:知識]]
[[zh:知识]]

Revision as of 06:23, 13 October 2008

Personification of knowledge (Greek Επιστημη, Episteme) in Celsus Library in Ephesus, Turkey.

Knowledge is defined (Oxford English Dictionary) variously as (i) expertise, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject, (ii) what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information or (iii) awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation. Philosophical debates in general start with Plato's formulation of knowledge as "justified true belief". There is however no single agreed definition of knowledge presently, nor any prospect of one, and there remain numerous competing theories.

Knowledge acquisition involves complex cognitive processes: perception, learning, communication, association and reasoning. The term knowledge is also used to mean the confident understanding of a subject with the ability to use it for a specific purpose if appropriate.

Defining knowledge (philosophy)

Robert Reid, Knowledge (1896). Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C.

We suppose ourselves to possess unqualified scientific knowledge of a thing, as opposed to knowing it in the accidental way in which the sophist knows, when we think that we know the cause on which the fact depends, as the cause of that fact and of no other, and, further, that the fact could not be other than it is. Now that scientific knowing is something of this sort is evident — witness both those who falsely claim it and those who actually possess it, since the former merely imagine themselves to be, while the latter are also actually, in the condition described. Consequently the proper object of unqualified scientific knowledge is something which cannot be other than it is.

— Aristotle, Posterior Analytics (Book 1 Part 2)

The definition of knowledge is a matter of on-going debate among philosophers in the field of epistemology. The classical definition, described but not ultimately endorsed by, Plato[1], has it that in order for there to be knowledge at least three criteria must be fulfilled; that in order to count as knowledge, a statement must be justified, true, and believed. Some claim that these conditions are not sufficient, as Gettier case examples allegedly demonstrate. There are a number of alternatives proposed, including Robert Nozick's arguments for a requirement that knowledge 'tracks the truth' and Simon Blackburn's additional requirement that we do not want to say that those who meet any of these conditions 'through a defect, flaw, or failure' have knowledge. Richard Kirkham suggests that our definition of knowledge requires that the believer's evidence is such that it logically necessitates the truth of the belief.[citation needed]

In contrast to this approach, Wittgenstein observed, following Moore's paradox, that one can say "He believes it, but it isn't so", but not "He knows it, but it isn't so". [2] He goes on to argue that these do not correspond to distinct mental states, but rather to distinct ways of talking about conviction. What is different here is not the mental state of the speaker, but the activity in which they are engaged. For example, on this account, to know that the kettle is boiling is not to be in a particular state of mind, but to perform a particular task with the statement that the kettle is boiling. Wittgenstein sought to bypass the difficulty of definition by looking to the way "knowledge" is used in natural languages. He saw knowledge as a case of a family resemblance.

Reliable Knowledge

In An Introduction to Logic and Scientific Method (1934), Morris R. Cohen and Ernest Nagel reviewed the pursuit of truth as determined by logical considerations. They reviewed ways of eliminating doubt and arriving at stable beliefs or reliable knowledge, such as

  • The method of authority
  • The method of intuition
  • The methods of experimental inquiry:
    • Types of invariant relations
    • The experimental method in general
    • The method of agreement
    • The method of difference[citation needed]
    • The joint method of agreement and difference
    • The method of concomitant variation
    • The doctrine of the uniformity of nature
    • The plurality of causes

Their final conclusion was, "Scientific method we declare as the most assured technique man has yet devised for controlling the flux of things and establishing stable beliefs."

In an essay entitled "Inductive Method and Scientific Discovery," Marcello Pera said, "In the first place, the scientific method is a procedure, a general strategy that indicates an ordered sequence of moves (or steps) which the scientist has to make (or go through) in order to reach the goal of his research." (In On Scientific Discovery, edited by Grmek, Cohen, and Cimino [1977], published in the Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Series.) The scientific method is not a method directly applied, but rather a guide to the mental activity stages of originating, refining, extending, and applying knowledge. It is subject neutral and flexible in use; it is thus suitable for all domains.

Statements about truth must be viewed skeptically. Rather than state something as "true," the following phrase should be used: "On the evidence available today the balance of probability favors the view that..." .[3]

The literature contains hundreds of formulas for the scientific method. They are basically the same but differ in length and terminology. In an article "Suggestions for Teaching the Scientific Method" published in the March 1961 issue of American Biology Teacher, Dr. Kenneth B.M. Crooks suggested this one:

  1. Curiosity
  2. Is there a problem?
  3. Get the evidence
  4. Attributes needed
  5. Weigh all evidence
  6. Make the educated guess (hypothesis)
  7. Challenge the hypothesis
  8. Get a conclusion
  9. Suspend judgment
  10. Deductive reasoning

Communicating knowledge

Symbolic representations can be used to indicate meaning and can be thought of as a dynamic process. Hence the transfer of the symbolic representation can be viewed as one ascription process whereby knowledge can be transferred. Other forms of communication include imitation, narrative exchange along with a range of other methods. There is no complete theory of knowledge transfer or communication.[citation needed]

While many would agree that one of the most universal and significant tools for the transfer of knowledge is writing (of many kinds), argument over the usefulness of the written word exists however, with some scholars skeptical of its impact on societies. In his novel Technopoly Neil Postman demonstrates the argument against the use of writing through an excerpt from Plato's work Phaedrus (Postman, Neil (1992) Technopoly, Vintage, New York, pp 73). In this excerpt the scholar Socrates recounts the story of Thamus, the Egyptian king and Theuth the inventor of the written word. In this story, Theuth presents his new invention "writing" to King Thamus, telling Thamus that his new invention "will improve both the wisdom and memory of the Egyptians" (Postman, Neil (1992) Technopoly, Vintage, New York, pp 74). King Thamus is skeptical of this new invention and rejects it as a tool of recollection rather than retained knowledge. He argues that the written word will infect the Egyptian people with fake knowledge as they will be able to attain facts and stories from an external source and will no longer be forced to mentally retain large quantities of knowledge themselves (Postman, Neil (1992) Technopoly, Vintage, New York ,pp 74).

Andrew Robinson also highlights, in his work The Origins of Writing, the possibility for writing to be used to spread false information and there for the ability of the written word to decrease social knowledge (Robinson, Andrew (2003) The Origins of Writing in Crowley and Heyer (eds) Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society, Boston pp 34). People are often internalizing new information which they perceive to be knowledge but are in reality fill their minds with false knowledge.

Situated knowledge

Situated knowledge is knowledge specific to a particular situation. Imagine two very similar breeds of mushroom, which grow on either side of a mountain, one nutritious, one poisonous. Relying on knowledge from one side of an ecological boundary, after crossing to the other, may lead to starving rather than eating perfectly healthy food near at hand, or to poisoning oneself by mistake. [citation needed]

Some methods of generating knowledge, such as trial and error, or learning from experience, tend to create highly situational knowledge. One of the main benefits of the scientific method is that the theories it generates are much less situational than knowledge gained by other methods.[citation needed] Situational knowledge is often embedded in language, culture, or traditions.[citation needed]

Knowledge generated through experience is called knowledge "a posteriori", meaning afterwards. The pure existence of a term like "a posteriori" means this also has a counterpart. In this case that is knowledge "a priori", meaning before. The knowledge prior to any experience means that there are certain "assumptions" that one takes for granted. For example if one is being told about a chair it is clear to him that the chair is in space, that it is 3D. This knowledge is not knowledge that one can "forget", even someone suffering from amnesia experiences the world in 3D. See also: A priori and a posteriori.[citation needed]

Partial knowledge

One discipline of epistemology focuses on partial knowledge. In most realistic cases, it is not possible to have an exhaustive understanding of an information domain, so then we have to live with the fact that our knowledge is always not complete, that is, partial. Most real problems have to be solved by taking advantage of a partial understanding of the problem context and problem data. That is very different from the typical simple math problems that we solve at school, where all data are given and we have a perfect understanding of formulas necessary to solve them.[citation needed]

Knowledge management

Knowledge management is a management theory which emerged in the 1990s. It seeks to understand the way in which knowledge is created, used and shared within organizations. A significant part of Knowledge Management theory and practice aligns two models: (i) the DIKW model, which places data, information, knowledge and wisdom into an increasingly useful pyramid. (ii) Nonaka's reformulation of Polanyi's distinction between tacit and explicit knowledge. Both of these models are increasingly under challenge with different schools of thought emerging which are more fully described and referenced in the main article.

An objective of mainstream knowledge management is to ensure that the right information is delivered to the right person just in time, in order to take the most appropriate decision. In that sense, knowledge management is not interested in managing knowledge per se, but to relate knowledge and its usage. This leads to Organizational Memory Systems. More recent developments have focused on managing networks (the flow of knowledge rather than knowledge itself) and narrative forms of knowledge exchange.

Philosophers versus Biologists: — "Knowledge" of two types

This article deals chiefly with "knowledge" in its traditional form as viewed by philosophers, but it may be helpful to be aware of a broader usage which has been developing within biology/psychology—discussed elsewhere as meta-epistemology, or genetic epistemology, and to some extent related to "theory of cognitive development".     [Note that "Epistemology" is the study of knowledge and how it is acquired.]

Until recent times, at least in the Western tradition, it was simply taken for granted that knowledge was something possessed by humans—or God alone—and probably adult humans at that. Sometimes the notion might stretch to (ii) Society-as-such, as in (e.g.) "the knowledge possessed by the Coptic culture" (as opposed to its individual members), but that was not assured either. Nor was it usual to consider unconscious knowledge in any systematic way until this approach was popularized by Freud. [4]

Other biological domains where "knowledge" might be said to reside, include: (iii) the immune system, and (iv) in the DNA of the genetic code. See the list of four "epistemological domains":   Popper, (1975)[5]; and Traill (2008 [1]: Table S, page 31)—also references by both to Niels Jerne.

Such considerations seem to call for a separate definition of "knowledge" to cover these more-general systems:

Defining knowledge (biology)

Knowledge is not just information. It must be usefully available to the system, though that system need not be conscious. Thus the criteria seem to be:

  • The system should apparently be dynamic and self-organizing (unlike a mere book on its own).
  • The knowledge must constitute some sort of representation of "the outside world"[6], or ways of dealing with it (directly or indirectly).
  • There must be some way for the system to access this information quickly enough for it to be useful.

Religious meaning of knowledge

In many expressions of Christianity, such as Catholicism and Anglicanism, knowledge is one of the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit.[7]

In Islam, the prophet Muhammad has described himself and his vicergeant Ali as the sources of knowledge: "I am the City of Knowledge and Ali is its Gate".

Hindu Scriptures present two kinds of knowledge, Paroksha Gnyana and Aporoksha Gnyana. Paroksha Gnyana (also spelled Paroksha-Jnana) is secondhand knowledge: knowledge obtained from books, hearsay, etc. Aporoksha Gnyana (also spelled Aparoksha-Jnana) is the knowledge borne of direct experience, i.e., knowledge that one discovers for oneself.[8]

The Old Testament's Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil contained the knowledge that separated Man from God: "And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil…" (Genesis 3:22)

In Gnosticism divine knowledge or gnosis is hoped to be attained and escape from the demiurge's physical world. And in Thelema knowledge and conversation with one's Holy Guardian Angel is the purpose of life, which is similar to Gnosis or enlightenment in other mystery religions.

See also

References

  1. ^ In Plato's Theaetetus, Socrates and Theaetetus discuss three definitions of knowledge: knowledge as nothing but perception, knowledge as true judgment, and, finally, knowledge as a true judgment with an account. Each of these definitions is shown to be unsatisfactory.
  2. ^ Ludwig Wittgenstein, On Certainty, remark 42
  3. ^ V. Gordon Childe, Man Makes Himself, 1936.
  4. ^ There is quite a good case for this exclusive specialization used by philosophers, in that it allows for in-depth study of logic-procedures and other abstractions which are not found elsewhere. However this may lead to problems whenever the topic spills over into those excluded domains—e.g. when Kant (following Newton) dismissed Space and Time as axiomatically "transcendental" and "a priori" — a claim later disproved by Piaget's clinical studies. It also seems likely that the vexed problem of "infinite regress" can be largely (but not completely) solved by proper attention to how unconscious concepts are actually developed, both during infantile learning and as inherited "pseudo-transcendentals" inherited from the trial-and-error of previous generations. See also "Tacit knowledge".
    • Piaget, J., and B.Inhelder (1927 / 1969). The child's conception of time. Routledge & Kegan Paul: London.
    • Piaget, J., and B.Inhelder (1948 / 1956). The child's conception of space. Routledge & Kegan Paul: London.
  5. ^ Popper, K.R. (1975). "The rationality of scientific revolutions"; in Rom Harré (ed.), Problems of Scientific Revolution: Scientific Progress and Obstacles to Progress in the Sciences. Clarendon Press: Oxford.
  6. ^ This "outside world" could include other subsystems within the same organism—e.g. different "mental levels" corresponding to different Piagetian stages. See Theory of cognitive development.
  7. ^ "Part Three, No. 1831". Catechism of the Catholic Church. Retrieved 2007-04-20.
  8. ^ Swami Krishnananda. "Chapter 7". The Philosophy of the Panchadasi. The Divine Life Society. Retrieved 2008-07-05.

External links