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Knowledge society

 

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Knowledge society



 
 
Broadly speaking, the term Knowledge Society refers to any society
Society

A society is a group of humans characterized by patterns of relationships between individuals that share a distinctive culture and/or institutions....
 where knowledge is the primary production resource instead of capital and labour. It may also refer to the use a certain society gives to information. A Knowledge society "creates, shares and uses knowledge for the prosperity and well-being of its people".

Characteristics
Knowledge societies have the characteristic that knowledge forms a major component of any human activity.






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Encyclopedia


Broadly speaking, the term Knowledge Society refers to any society
Society

A society is a group of humans characterized by patterns of relationships between individuals that share a distinctive culture and/or institutions....
 where knowledge is the primary production resource instead of capital and labour. It may also refer to the use a certain society gives to information. A Knowledge society "creates, shares and uses knowledge for the prosperity and well-being of its people".

Characteristics


Knowledge societies have the characteristic that knowledge forms a major component of any human activity. Economic, social, cultural, and all other human activities become dependent on a huge volume of knowledge and information. A knowledge society is one in which knowledge becomes a major creative force.

Knowledge societies are not a new occurrence. For example, fishermen have long shared the knowledge of predicting the weather to their community and this knowledge gets added to the social capital of the community.

What is new is that
  • With current technologies, knowledge societies need not be constrained by geographic proximity
  • Current technology offers much more possibilities for sharing, archiving and retrieving knowledge
  • Knowledge has become the most important capital in the present age, and hence the success of any society lies in harnessing it.


Increasing relevance


Knowledge and information are vital components of the formation of any society because every society is formed around some shared concepts. One of the contributions of Globalisation and new ICT is the creation of a global society with a shared knowledge of issues and possibilities.

'Material resources and their processing' - henceforth E - have been the basis of economic growth. Music, art, path-breaking thought streams, mixing of cultural attributes of different societies bringing in new cultural attributes, etc. - henceforth C - result in cultural development and act as a catalyst in entire social development. Now that the many societies have so matured that almost all the activities involved in E and C rely on existing knowledge base very much. This knowledge is available in written documents, written laws, unwritten laws, people's convictions, people's words in different languages etc. In the same way as the unequal distribution of materials (wealth in generalized term) caused unbalanced and inappropriate development of society to date, imbalances in the knowledge distribution, knowledge availability, knowledge sharing, etc. hinder the economic/cultural/social development of human societies. The knowledge societies first realize the importance of knowledge and also the importance of proper knowledge distribution, sharing and building for social development.

In rapidly changing times the knowledge for sophisticated activities often become quickly outdated; this makes the ability of an individual to acquire new skills, within a knowledge society, and important one.

Freedom


  1. Knowledge by nature is free
  2. Knowledge should be free for better benefit of society
  3. Knowledge should be free for better development and crystallization of knowledge
  4. Knowledge is inherently political and an exercise in power and control


Examples of societies that can blossom to knowledge societies


People from the same field
  • Teachers teaching the same subject.
  • Fans of the same musical group
  • Artists with similar interests


People from different fields
  • Engineers talking to scientists about a scientific issue related to their engineering project
  • Researchers of different fields discussing a common research problem
  • Artists interested in fractal
    Fractal

    A fractal is generally "a rough or fragmented Shape that can be split into parts, each of which is a reduced-size copy of the whole," a property called self-similarity....
    s getting in touch with programmers
  • Mystics talking to scientists


Infrastructure

A knowledge society needs infrastructure like

  1. Physical: meeting places, notice boards ...
  2. Technological: local language content sharing, mailing lists, web portals, wikis, chat rooms, video conferencing, virtual meetings, collaborative development environments, distance education ...


The Free software movement
Free software movement

The free software movement is a social movement which aims to promote user's rights to access and modify software. The alternative terms for free software "libre software", "open source", and "FOSS" are associated with the free software movement....
 is a success story of knowledge society

The term is frequently used by politicians, policy-makers, journalists and by scientists in the Foresight
Foresight

A review, analysis, and synthesis of past definitions and usages of the foresight concept into a generic definition, in order to make the concept measurable has classified foresight as a behaviour ....
 social studies.

See also

  • information society
    Information society

    An information society is a society in which the creation, distribution, diffusion, use, integration and manipulation of information is a significant economic, political, and cultural activity....
  • information revolution
  • knowledge economy
    Knowledge economy

    The knowledge economy is a term that refers either to an economy of knowledge focused on the production and management of knowledge in the frame of economy constraints, or to a knowledge-based economy....
  • intellectual capital
    Intellectual capital

    Intellectual capital is a term with various definitions in different theories of management and economics. Accordingly, its only truly neutral definition is as a debate over economic "intangibles"....
  • Knowledge building
    Knowledge building

    The Knowledge building theory was created and developed by Carl Bereiter and Marlene Scardamalia for describing what a community of learners needs to accomplish in order to create knowledge....
  • knowledge divide
    Knowledge divide

    The concept of a knowledge divide is used to describe the gap in living conditions between those who can find, manage and process information or knowledge, and those who are impaired in this, for one reason or another....
  • DEMOLOGOS
    DEMOLOGOS

    DEMOLOGOS stands for Development Models and Logics of Socioeconomic Organization in Space. It is a Specific Targeted Research Project under European Commission's Sixth Framework Programme, coordinated by Frank Moulaert at Global Urban Research Unit, , Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, England....
  • meta-knowledge
  • Libre Knowledge
    Libre knowledge

    Libre Knowledge is knowledge which may be acquired, interpreted and applied freely, it can be re-formulated according to one's needs, and shared with others for community benefit....


External links

  • - Stanford Univ. Economics faculty.


Wikibooks

  • Legal and Regulatory Issues in the Information Economy