Religion Knowledge plays a central role in many religions. Knowledge claims about the
existence of God or
religious doctrines about how each one should live their lives are found in almost every culture. However, such knowledge claims are often controversial and are commonly rejected by
religious skeptics and
atheists. The
epistemology of religion is the field of inquiry studying whether
belief in God and in other religious doctrines is
rational and amounts to knowledge. One important view in this field is
evidentialism, which states that belief in religious doctrines is justified if it is supported by sufficient evidence. Suggested examples of evidence for religious doctrines include
religious experiences such as direct contact with the divine or inner testimony when hearing God's voice. Evidentialists often reject that belief in religious doctrines amounts to knowledge based on the claim that there is not sufficient evidence. A famous saying in this regard is due to Bertrand Russell. When asked how he would justify his lack of belief in God when facing his judgment after death, he replied "Not enough evidence, God! Not enough evidence." However, religious teachings about the existence and nature of God are not always seen as knowledge claims by their defenders. Some explicitly state that the proper attitude towards such doctrines is not knowledge but
faith. This is often combined with the assumption that these doctrines are true but cannot be fully understood by reason or verified through rational inquiry. For this reason, it is claimed that one should accept them even though they do not amount to knowledge. Distinct religions often differ from each other concerning the doctrines they proclaim as well as their understanding of the role of knowledge in religious practice. In both the Jewish and the Christian traditions, knowledge plays a role in the
fall of man, in which Adam and Eve were expelled from the
Garden of Eden. Responsible for this fall was that they ignored God's command and ate from the
tree of knowledge, which gave them the knowledge of good and evil. This is seen as a rebellion against God since this knowledge belongs to God and it is not for humans to decide what is right or wrong. In the Christian literature, knowledge is seen as one of the
seven gifts of the Holy Spirit. In
Islam, "the Knowing" (
al-ʿAlīm) is one of the
99 names reflecting distinct attributes of
God. The
Qur'an asserts that knowledge comes from
Allah and the acquisition of knowledge is encouraged in the
teachings of Muhammad. is the goddess of knowledge and the arts in Hinduism. In Buddhism, knowledge that leads to
liberation is called
vijjā. It contrasts with
avijjā or ignorance, which is understood as the root of all
suffering. This is often explained in relation to the claim that humans suffer because they crave things that are
impermanent. The ignorance of the impermanent nature of things is seen as the factor responsible for this craving. The central goal of Buddhist practice is to stop suffering. This aim is to be achieved by understanding and practicing the teaching known as the
Four Noble Truths and thereby overcoming ignorance. Knowledge plays a key role in the classical path of Hinduism known as
jñāna yoga or "path of knowledge". It aims to achieve oneness with the divine by fostering an understanding of the self and its relation to
Brahman or ultimate reality.
Anthropology The
anthropology of knowledge is a multi-disciplinary field of inquiry. It studies how knowledge is acquired, stored, retrieved, and communicated. Special interest is given to how knowledge is reproduced and changes in relation to social and cultural circumstances. In this context, the term
knowledge is used in a very broad sense, roughly equivalent to terms like
understanding and
culture. This means that the forms and reproduction of understanding are studied irrespective of their
truth value. In epistemology, by contrast, knowledge is usually restricted to forms of true belief. The main focus in
anthropology is on
empirical observations of how people ascribe truth values to meaning contents, like when affirming an assertion, even if these contents are false. The reproduction of knowledge and its changes often happen through some form of communication used to
transfer knowledge. This includes face-to-face discussions and online communications as well as seminars and rituals. An important role in this context falls to institutions, like university departments or scientific journals in the academic context. Within a society, people belonging to the same social group usually understand things and organize knowledge in similar ways to one another. In this regard, social identities play a significant role: people who associate themselves with similar identities, like age-influenced, professional, religious, and ethnic identities, tend to embody similar forms of knowledge. Such identities concern both how a person sees themselves, for example, in terms of the ideals they pursue, as well as how other people see them, such as the expectations they have toward the person.
Sociology The sociology of knowledge is the subfield of sociology that studies how thought and society are related to each other. Like the anthropology of knowledge, it understands "knowledge" in a wide sense that encompasses philosophical and political ideas, religious and ideological doctrines, folklore, law, and technology. The sociology of knowledge studies in what sociohistorical circumstances knowledge arises, what consequences it has, and on what existential conditions it depends. The examined conditions include physical, demographic, economic, and sociocultural factors. For instance, philosopher
Karl Marx claimed that the dominant ideology in a society is a product of and changes with the underlying socioeconomic conditions. A related issue concerns the link between knowledge and
power, in particular, the extent to which knowledge is power. The philosopher
Michel Foucault explored this issue and examined how knowledge and the institutions responsible for it control people through what he termed
biopower by shaping societal norms, values, and regulatory mechanisms in fields like
psychiatry, medicine, and the
penal system. A central subfield is the
sociology of scientific knowledge, which investigates the social factors involved in the production and validation of scientific knowledge. This encompasses examining the impact of the
distribution of resources and rewards on the scientific process, which leads some areas of research to flourish while others languish. Further topics focus on selection processes, such as
how academic journals decide whether to publish an article and how academic institutions recruit researchers, and the general values and norms characteristic of the
scientific profession.
Others Formal epistemology studies knowledge using formal tools found in mathematics and logic. An important issue in this field concerns the epistemic principles of knowledge. These are rules governing how knowledge and related states behave and in what relations they stand to each other. The transparency principle, also referred to as the
luminosity of knowledge, states that it is impossible for someone to know something without knowing that they know it. According to the conjunction principle, if a person has justified beliefs in two separate propositions, then they are also justified in believing the
conjunction of these two propositions. In this regard, if Bob has a justified belief that dogs are animals and another justified belief that cats are animals, then he is justified to believe the conjunction that both dogs and cats are animals. Other commonly discussed principles are the closure principle and the evidence transfer principle.
Knowledge management is the process of creating, gathering, storing, and sharing knowledge. It involves the management of information assets that can take the form of
documents,
databases, policies, and procedures. It is of particular interest in the field of business and
organizational development, as it directly impacts
decision-making and
strategic planning. Knowledge management efforts are often employed to increase
operational efficiency in attempts to gain a
competitive advantage. Key processes in the field of knowledge management are knowledge creation,
knowledge storage,
knowledge sharing, and knowledge application. Knowledge creation is the first step and involves the production of new information. Knowledge storage can happen through media like books, audio recordings, film, and digital databases. Secure storage facilitates knowledge sharing, which involves the transmission of information from one person to another. For the knowledge to be beneficial, it has to be put into practice, meaning that its insights should be used to either improve existing practices or implement new ones.
Knowledge representation is the process of storing organized information, which may happen using various forms of media and also includes information stored in the mind. It plays a key role in the
artificial intelligence, where the term is used for the field of inquiry that studies how computer systems can efficiently represent information. This field investigates how different
data structures and interpretative procedures can be combined to achieve this goal and which formal languages can be used to express knowledge items. Some efforts in this field are directed at developing general languages and systems that can be employed in a great variety of domains while others focus on an optimized representation method within one specific domain. Knowledge representation is closely linked to
automatic reasoning because the purpose of knowledge representation formalisms is usually to construct a
knowledge base from which
inferences are drawn. Influential knowledge base formalisms include logic-based systems,
rule-based systems,
semantic networks, and
frames. Logic-based systems rely on
formal languages employed in
logic to represent knowledge. They use linguistic devices like individual terms,
predicates, and
quantifiers. For rule-based systems, each unit of information is expressed using a conditional production rule of the form "if A then B". Semantic nets model knowledge as a
graph consisting of
vertices to represent facts or concepts and edges to represent the relations between them. Frames provide complex taxonomies to group items into classes, subclasses, and instances.
Pedagogy is the study of
teaching methods or the art of teaching. It explores
how learning takes place and which techniques teachers may employ to transmit knowledge to students and improve their learning experience while keeping them motivated. There is a great variety of teaching methods and the most effective approach often depends on factors like the subject matter and the age and proficiency level of the learner. In teacher-centered education, the teacher acts as the authority figure imparting information and directing the learning process.
Student-centered approaches give a more active role to students with the teacher acting as a coach to facilitate the process. Further methodological considerations encompass the difference between group work and individual learning and the use of instructional media and other forms of
educational technology. == See also ==