Image for Plato and the Internet

Plato and the Internet

Part of the Postmodern encounters series
See all formats and editions

We live in a knowledge economy. Competition now straddles the world, and competitive advantage will be produced from now on by knowledge and creativity.

Acquiring and managing knowledge better has become a political imperative. And yet - what is knowledge? The arguments have changed little since Plato. Arguing against sceptics who claim we have no knowledge at all, philosophers have focused on knowledge of facts, on how to distinguish true knowledge from mere belief.

But the knowledge economy is less interested in knowledge about facts as in know-how - the Internet provides anyone with a PC and a phone line with access to billions of documents.

We are drowning in information, while being starved of knowledge.

What we really want is to get clever things done, in smarter ways.

Plato and the Internet argues that what is important is not 'what facts you know', but 'what you know how to do', and that the essential contrast is not between knowledge and belief, but between knowledge and information.

Is the Internet really something new - or a continuation of the past by other means?

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£2.99 Save 25.00%
RRP £3.99
Product Details
Icon Books
1840463465 / 9781840463460
Paperback / softback
121
04/02/2002
United Kingdom
English
79 p.
18 cm
general /academic/professional/technical Learn More