knowledge - meaning and definition. What is knowledge
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What (who) is knowledge - definition

MENTAL POSSESSION OF INFORMATION OR SKILLS, CONTRIBUTING TO UNDERSTANDING
KnowLedge; Know; Situated knowledge; Knowlege; Knowladge; Knowledges; Human knowledge; Knowledgeable; Knows; Known; Knowers; Knowledgeably; Knowledgableness; Knowledgeableness; Knowledge transference; Situated knowledges; Sources of knowledge; Partial knowledge; Religious concepts of knowledge; Higher knowledge; Lower knowledge; Higher and lower knowledge
  • Ciudad Universitaria, Madrid, Spain]])
  • Foundationalism, coherentism, and infinitism are theories of the structure of knowledge. The black arrows symbolize how one belief supports another belief.
  • Knowledge is often defined as justified true belief.
  • [[Saraswati]] is the goddess of knowledge and the arts in Hinduism.
  • The [[owl of Athena]], a symbol of knowledge in the [[Western world]]

knowledge         
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Knowledge is information and understanding about a subject which a person has, or which all people have.
She told Parliament she had no knowledge of the affair.
...the quest for scientific knowledge.
N-UNCOUNT: usu with supp
2.
If you say that something is true to your knowledge or to the best of your knowledge, you mean that you believe it to be true but it is possible that you do not know all the facts.
Alec never carried a gun to my knowledge...
PHRASE: PHR with cl/group
3.
If you do something safe in the knowledge that something else is the case, you do the first thing confidently because you are sure of the second thing. (WRITTEN)
You can let your kids play here, safe in the knowledge that they won't get sunburn.
PHRASE: PHR after v, usu PHR that
knowledge         
n.
1.
Apprehension, comprehension, perception, understanding, discernment, judgment.
2.
Learning, erudition, scholarship, enlightenment, lore, acquirements, attainments, information.
3.
Cognizance, cognition, notice, information.
knowledge         
<artificial intelligence, information science> The objects, concepts and relationships that are assumed to exist in some area of interest. A collection of knowledge, represented using some knowledge representation language is known as a knowledge base and a program for extending and/or querying a knowledge base is a knowledge-based system. Knowledge differs from data or information in that new knowledge may be created from existing knowledge using logical inference. If information is data plus meaning then knowledge is information plus processing. A common form of knowledge, e.g. in a Prolog program, is a collection of facts and rules about some subject. For example, a knowledge base about a family might contain the facts that John is David's son and Tom is John's son and the rule that the son of someone's son is their grandson. From this knowledge it could infer the new fact that Tom is David's grandson. See also Knowledge Level. (1994-10-19)

Wikipedia

Knowledge

Knowledge is a form of awareness or familiarity. It is often understood as awareness of facts or as practical skills, and may also mean familiarity with objects or situations. Knowledge of facts, also called propositional knowledge, is often defined as true belief that is distinct from opinion or guesswork by virtue of justification. While there is wide agreement among philosophers that propositional knowledge is a form of true belief, many controversies in philosophy focus on justification: whether it is needed at all, how to understand it, and whether something else besides it is needed. These controversies intensified due to a series of thought experiments by Edmund Gettier and have provoked various alternative definitions. Some of them deny that justification is necessary and suggest alternative criteria while others accept that justification is an essential aspect and formulate additional requirements.

Knowledge can be produced in many different ways. The most important source of empirical knowledge is perception, which is the usage of the senses. Many theorists also include introspection as a source of knowledge, not of external physical objects, but of one's own mental states. Other sources often discussed include memory, rational intuition, inference, and testimony. According to foundationalism, some of these sources are basic in the sense that they can justify beliefs without depending on other mental states. This claim is rejected by coherentists, who contend that a sufficient degree of coherence among all the mental states of the believer is necessary for knowledge. According to infinitism, an infinite chain of beliefs is needed.

Many different aspects of knowledge are investigated, and it plays a role in various disciplines. It is the primary subject of the field of epistemology, which studies what someone knows, how they come to know it, and what it means to know something. The problem of the value of knowledge concerns the question of why knowledge is more valuable than mere true belief. Philosophical skepticism is the thesis that humans lack any form of knowledge or that knowledge is impossible. Formal epistemology studies, among other things, the rules governing how knowledge and related states behave and in what relations they stand to each other. Science tries to acquire knowledge using the scientific method, which is based on repeatable experimentation, observation, and measurement. Many religions hold that humans should seek knowledge and that God or the divine is the source of knowledge.

Examples of use of knowledge
1. Before long knowledge had come to mean exclusively religious knowledge.
2. The knowledge surplus must be cancelled out by negative knowledge.
3. I appreciate the efforts by these organisations for knowledge enabling the villagers at the Village Knowledge Centres (VKC). These VKCs will act as a knowledge–delivery tool.
4. Through ten circle rooms including the "Maritime Knowledge Dissemination Room" and "Mountaineering Knowledge Dissemination Room", they consolidate what they have learnt at schools and acquire new scientific knowledge.
5. In the 21st century, India needs a large number of talented youth with higher education for the task of knowledge acquisition, knowledge imparting, knowledge creation and knowledge sharing," the President remarked.