File:Wikimania 20060806 David Weinberger- What's happening to knowledge.ogg
Wikimania_20060806_David_Weinberger-_What's_happening_to_knowledge.ogg (Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 47 min 28 s, 48 kbps, file size: 16.23 MB)
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Summary
[edit]DescriptionWikimania 20060806 David Weinberger- What's happening to knowledge.ogg | recording from the livestream - wikimania2006 Walter 00:08, 7 August 2006 (UTC) |
Date | 7 August 2006 (original upload date) |
Source | No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims). |
Author | No machine-readable author provided. Walter assumed (based on copyright claims). |
Licensing
[edit]Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. |
About his recording
[edit]type=keynote title=What's Happening to Knowledge? author=David Weinberger time=Sunday, 3:30pm abstract=
The old principles for the organization of knowledge turn out to be based on principles for organizing physical objects; in the digital age we're creating new principles free of the old limitations. This is changing the basic shape of knowledge, from (typically) trees to miscellanized piles. This has consequences for the nature of topics, the role of metadata, and, crucially, the authority of knowledge. In short, the change in the shape of knowledge is also changing its place. Despite the hysteria too often heard, knowledge is not being threatened. We are way too good at generating knowledge, and it is way too important to us as a species. But, much of what we're doing together on the Web is about increasing meaning, not knowledge. That re-frames knowledge -- traditional and Wikipedian -- in ways that are hard to predict but important.
Outline
[edit]Note: These are my notes-in-progress. Sorry they're a little cryptic. And highly likely to change, especially in response to what happens at Wikimedia. [Revised on Aug 2] - D. Weinberger
Disclaimer
[edit]- Too big and grand a topic.
- Path through it...Why is there such a hubub about Wikipedia?
- You think you’re doing K, but much of the world thinks you’re mardi gras
- You think you’re the searchers and the defenders of NPOV - the traditional values
- Why do the media insist on taking W (falsely) as mob, more committed to social process than to truth?
- You think you’re doing K, but much of the world thinks you’re mardi gras
Seven properties of traditional knowledge
[edit]- Three-term relationship: knowledge, knower, known
- One K
- Same for everyone
- Same in everyone’s mouth
- Not everything is K
- Simpler than world
- Orderly
- Order is where beauty meets K
- Harmony of spheres
- Mendeleev
- Harmony of spheres
- Look at five of the properties again
1. In our heads: Romantic myth of knower
[edit]- Wikipedia is perceived as mob rule, more committed to social process than to truth
- We think K can’t be social:
- Myth of individual genius
- But:
- what it takes to know a gnat (= institutional nature of k)
- Got K driven into our heads:
- K as a property of belief
- Where head meets world
- Hence: mixed up with privileged relation to world
2. Experts
[edit]- Tomato topic - knowledge without knower
- Expert has to negotiate knowledge
- Why is that scary?
- If K is mirror, there’s no negotiating with a mirror
- Why is that scary?
3. Simpler and orderly: Unbound topics
[edit]- Bush’s immigration speech complexified by blogs
- Who gets to decide what’s important?
- Social structure built on this
- Money rests on it
- Interpenetration of topics
- Went through fear of alphabetization
- Mortimer Adler
- Now past that. Networked topics. Web of topics, based on relationships.
- Web is already semantic. See it at Wikipedia’s links.
- Went through fear of alphabetization
- Authority and truth
- Wikipedia’s notices conditioning articles – “This article may not be NPOV,” etc. , medical info
- Why don’t traditional authorities use them?
- Prefer authority to truth
- Why don’t traditional authorities use them?
- Wikipedia’s notices conditioning articles – “This article may not be NPOV,” etc. , medical info
4. Bigger than we are: Exactly our size
[edit]- Wikipedia is better representation of human interests and human world than any traditional encyclopedia can be
5. One truth: Commoditization
[edit]- Wikipedia flies in the face of the Web’s multiverse
- Gets there by reducing knowledge to what can be agreed upon or civilly disagreed about
- Long tail of editing – life cycle
- Almanac commoditized facts
- What’s next? What’s up a level? Meaning
- How do you know a gnat? Heidegger wanted to know a hammer.
- Externalizing memory in writing, knowledge in books
- W as the knowledge moment in something larger
- Heidegger on meaning
- Disorderly
- Meaning, not knowledge
- We’ll always know
- Back to gnat
- For the next hundred years, our task is to build meaning
- We’ll always know
File history
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 00:08, 7 August 2006 | 47 min 28 s (16.23 MB) | Walter (talk | contribs) | recording from the livestream - wikimania2006 ~~~~ |
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Update transcode statusFormat | Bitrate | Download | Status | Encode time |
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MP3 | 122 kbps | Completed 12:43, 24 December 2017 | 48 s |
Metadata
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Short title | What's happening to knowledge? - recording provided by Wikizine.org |
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Author | David Weinberger |
Software used | Xiph.Org libVorbis I 20050304 |
Date and time of digitizing | 2006-08-06 |