Our culture is dominated by digital documents in ways that are easy to overlook. These documents have changed our worldviews about science and have raised our expectations of them as tools for knowledge justification. This article explores the complexities surrounding the digital document by revisiting Michael Polanyi’s theory of tacit knowledge—the idea that “we can know more than we can tell.” The theory presents to us a dilemma: if we can know more than we can tell, then this means that the communication of science via the document as a primary form of telling will always be incomplete. This dilemma presents significant challenges to the open science movement
Currently, Polanyi’s tacit dimension only exists in a philosophical environment. Polanyi’s assertion...
Recent research in several apparently unrelated fields has highlighted the insights afforded by dist...
This paper aims to clarify that the link between Michael Polanyi\u2019s tacit knowledge theory and t...
Our culture is dominated by digital documents in ways that are easy to overlook. These documents hav...
A talk about the role that knowledge management (and sub areas) might play in open science. The open...
How can we claim to know and even tenaciously hold in science what we might possibly doubt. Standard...
Fifty years after the publication of Michael Polanyi's magnum opus, Personal Knowledge, the fashion ...
This chapter sets out an account of tacit knowledge as conceptually structured, situation specific p...
We can know more than we can tell. In this paper we discuss how Polanyi applied his tacit knowledge ...
The most famous definition of tacit knowledge is a paradoxical phrase coined by Michael Polanyi: “We...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN029843 / BLDSC - British Library D...
This article explores the implications of Michael Polanyi's concept of Tacit Knowledge for religious...
In the aftermath of the modern science world scientists are still searching for some kind of ontolog...
Half a century after Michael Polanyi conceptualised ‘the tacit component’ in personal knowing, manag...
Three recent interpreters of tacit knowledge, Harald Grimen, Harry Collins, and John McDowell, eithe...
Currently, Polanyi’s tacit dimension only exists in a philosophical environment. Polanyi’s assertion...
Recent research in several apparently unrelated fields has highlighted the insights afforded by dist...
This paper aims to clarify that the link between Michael Polanyi\u2019s tacit knowledge theory and t...
Our culture is dominated by digital documents in ways that are easy to overlook. These documents hav...
A talk about the role that knowledge management (and sub areas) might play in open science. The open...
How can we claim to know and even tenaciously hold in science what we might possibly doubt. Standard...
Fifty years after the publication of Michael Polanyi's magnum opus, Personal Knowledge, the fashion ...
This chapter sets out an account of tacit knowledge as conceptually structured, situation specific p...
We can know more than we can tell. In this paper we discuss how Polanyi applied his tacit knowledge ...
The most famous definition of tacit knowledge is a paradoxical phrase coined by Michael Polanyi: “We...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN029843 / BLDSC - British Library D...
This article explores the implications of Michael Polanyi's concept of Tacit Knowledge for religious...
In the aftermath of the modern science world scientists are still searching for some kind of ontolog...
Half a century after Michael Polanyi conceptualised ‘the tacit component’ in personal knowing, manag...
Three recent interpreters of tacit knowledge, Harald Grimen, Harry Collins, and John McDowell, eithe...
Currently, Polanyi’s tacit dimension only exists in a philosophical environment. Polanyi’s assertion...
Recent research in several apparently unrelated fields has highlighted the insights afforded by dist...
This paper aims to clarify that the link between Michael Polanyi\u2019s tacit knowledge theory and t...