Dialogue, Skill and Tacit KnowledgeISBN: 978-0-470-01921-4
Hardcover
368 pages
December 2005
This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 10-15 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.
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Interweaving theory with practical guidance, this book looks at the importance of tacit knowledge and shows how it is now being put in motion through groundbreaking analogical thinking methods. Chief among these is the Dialogue Seminar, developed by the editors, in which learning is seen as arising from encounters with differences.
There can be no consensus on the value of corporate knowledge until what is meant by that knowledge is discussed and defined. Based on two decades of research and a host of practical cases, this book offers a way forward.
"Göranzon argues that the question of whether machines
can think is not the right question to ask. The more important
question, he believes, is the impact of automation on work and
human skills, and he is looking for a way of describing skills that
allows us to discuss this question."
—Janet Vaux, New Scientist
"A Swedish initiave to rethink the relationship between learning
and work."
—Rolf Hughes, The Times Higher Education