knowledge of man - definição. O que é knowledge of man. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é knowledge of man - definição

Knowledge Value; Value of knowledge

The Green Man of Knowledge         
SCOTTISH FOLKTALE
Draft:The Green Man of Knowledge (Scottish folktale); The Green Man of Knowledge (Scottish folktale)
The Green Man of Knowledge is a Scottish folktale collected in 1954Anderson, Graham. Fairytale in the Ancient World.
Knowledge transfer         
  • Knowledge transfer icon from [[The Noun Project]].
  • Linear, divergent, and convergent knowledge transfer
SHARING KNOWLEDGE FOR PROBLEM SOLVING
(Szulanski 1996); Knowledge exchange; Transfer of information; Transfer of knowledge; Knowledge flow; Knowledge flows; Knowledge transfer and exchange; Research practice gap; Draft:Research practice gap; Knowledge transmission
Knowledge transfer refers to sharing or disseminating of knowledge and providing inputs to problem solving. In organizational theory, knowledge transfer is the practical problem of transferring knowledge from one part of the organization to another.
Knowledge extraction         
CREATION OF KNOWLEDGE FROM STRUCTURED AND UNSTRUCTURED SOURCES
Knowledge discovery; Ontology-based information extraction; List of knowledge extraction tools; List of tools for knowledge extraction; Semantic knowledge extraction
Knowledge extraction is the creation of knowledge from structured (relational databases, XML) and unstructured (text, documents, images) sources. The resulting knowledge needs to be in a machine-readable and machine-interpretable format and must represent knowledge in a manner that facilitates inferencing.

Wikipédia

Knowledge value

The idea that knowledge has value is ancient. In the 1st century AD, Juvenal (55-130) stated “All wish to know but none wish to pay the price". In 1775, Samuel Johnson wrote: “All knowledge is of itself of some value.”

In the 19th century, Coleridge (1825) stated that : “The worth and value of knowledge is in proportion to the worth and value of its object.” Auerbach (1865) asked: “What is all our knowledge worth?" although he proposed no answer. Largely the same ideas are already expressed in the term intellectual capital or the more ancient knowledge is power - given that power is a value in its own right.

Only towards of the end of the 20th century, however, was the value of knowledge in a business context generally recognized. The idea has since become something of a management fad, although many authors indicate that the underlying principles will become standard business practice. It is now understood that knowledge about how to produce products and provide services as well as their embedded knowledge is often more valuable than the products and services themselves or the materials they contain. Although measuring the value of knowledge remains elusive, describing its flow through value chains is a step in the right direction.

Firestone was the first to relate knowledge to business when he noted that “Thought, not money is the real business capital.” Alvin Toffler (1990) proposed that knowledge is a wealth and force multiplier, in that it augments what is available or reduces the amount needed to achieve a given purpose.

In comparing knowledge and product value, Amidon (1997) observes that knowledge about how to produce products may be more valuable than the products themselves. Leonard similarly points out that products are physical manifestations of knowledge and that their worth depends largely on the value of the embedded knowledge.

Davis (1999) further notes that the computer chips in a high-end automobile are worth more than the steel, plastics, glass, or rubber. However, Davis and Botin (1994) indicate that awareness of the value of knowledge exceeds the ability of many businesses to extract it from the goods and services in which it is embedded.

Measuring the value of knowledge has not progressed much beyond an awareness that traditional accounting practices are misleading and can lead to wrong business decisions (Martin, 1996). Amidon (1997) points out that the shift from tangible to intangible assets will revolutionize the way that enterprises are measured and that there is an entirely new way to value economic wealth.

Simard et al. (2007) developed a content value chain describing the flow of content through a sequence of stages in which its form is changed and its value or utility to users are notably increased at each stage: objects, data, information, knowledge, and wisdom. They also developed a knowledge services value chain, which describes the flow of knowledge services through a sequence of stages, in which value is embedded, advanced, or extracted.

The stages are: generate, transform, manage, use internally, transfer, add value, use professionally, use personally, and evaluate.