B. Klein, und T. Roth-Berghofer. Proceedings of the WM 2003 Workshop on Knowledge Management and Philosophy, (April 2003)http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-85 Last access: 2005-11-29.
Zusammenfassung
For centuries, Philosophy has been a mine of ideas used to fertilize other disciplines. Being the 'mother of sciences', Philosophy addressed the notion of knowledge, the generation of knowledge, its transfer, with its prospects and limitations for quite a while. Knowledge Management, on the other hand, is gaining increasing importance in all business activities. However, the multidisciplinarity of the approaches and the complexity of the notion of 'knowledge' raise many issues that are often simply ignored or treated offhandedly. What, then, seems better than turning to and examining the potential of contributions of Philosophy to Knowledge Management and search for mutual promotion and synergy? This article tries to show two directions where Philosophy may provide help: model construction and lateral thinking.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 KleinRoth-Berghofer03
%A Klein, Bertin
%A Roth-Berghofer, Thomas R.
%B Proceedings of the WM 2003 Workshop on Knowledge Management and Philosophy
%D 2003
%E Freyberg, Klaus
%E Petsche, Hans-Joachim
%E Klein, Bertin
%K DFKI Knowledge Philosophy, Management Informatics
%T Philosophy for IT for Knowledge Management
%X For centuries, Philosophy has been a mine of ideas used to fertilize other disciplines. Being the 'mother of sciences', Philosophy addressed the notion of knowledge, the generation of knowledge, its transfer, with its prospects and limitations for quite a while. Knowledge Management, on the other hand, is gaining increasing importance in all business activities. However, the multidisciplinarity of the approaches and the complexity of the notion of 'knowledge' raise many issues that are often simply ignored or treated offhandedly. What, then, seems better than turning to and examining the potential of contributions of Philosophy to Knowledge Management and search for mutual promotion and synergy? This article tries to show two directions where Philosophy may provide help: model construction and lateral thinking.
@inproceedings{KleinRoth-Berghofer03,
abstract = {For centuries, Philosophy has been a mine of ideas used to fertilize other disciplines. Being the 'mother of sciences', Philosophy addressed the notion of knowledge, the generation of knowledge, its transfer, with its prospects and limitations for quite a while. Knowledge Management, on the other hand, is gaining increasing importance in all business activities. However, the multidisciplinarity of the approaches and the complexity of the notion of 'knowledge' raise many issues that are often simply ignored or treated offhandedly. What, then, seems better than turning to and examining the potential of contributions of Philosophy to Knowledge Management and search for mutual promotion and synergy? This article tries to show two directions where Philosophy may provide help: model construction and lateral thinking. },
added-at = {2006-11-14T09:30:29.000+0100},
author = {Klein, Bertin and Roth-Berghofer, Thomas R.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21d558b3b0b100a215aecbbd38efd557a/thorob67},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the {WM 2003} Workshop on Knowledge Management and Philosophy},
date-modified = {2006-05-30 14:08:46 +0200},
editor = {Freyberg, Klaus and Petsche, Hans-Joachim and Klein, Bertin},
interhash = {f3d26701392ddb2d38fa6138d6e01045},
intrahash = {1d558b3b0b100a215aecbbd38efd557a},
keywords = {DFKI Knowledge Philosophy, Management Informatics},
local-url = {file://localhost/Users/roth/Documents/Forschung/Publikationen/2003/PhilKM2003/KleinRoth-Berghofer%202003-FINAL.pdf},
month = {April},
note = {\url{http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-85} [Last access: 2005-11-29]},
timestamp = {2006-11-14T09:30:29.000+0100},
title = {Philosophy for {IT} for Knowledge Management},
year = 2003
}