Canadian columnist
Mark Steyn called it "in fact a brilliant distillation of quite a complex matter". Australian economist and blogger
John Quiggin wrote: "Although the language may be tortured, the basic point is both valid and important." Psychoanalytic philosopher
Slavoj Žižek says that beyond these three categories there is a fourth, the unknown known, that which one intentionally refuses to acknowledge that one knows: "If Rumsfeld thinks that the main dangers in the confrontation with Iraq were the 'unknown unknowns', that is, the threats from Saddam whose nature we cannot even suspect, then the
Abu Ghraib scandal shows that the main dangers lie in the 'unknown knowns'—the disavowed beliefs, suppositions and obscene practices we pretend not to know about, even though they form the background of our public values." German sociologists Christopher Daase and Oliver Kessler agreed that the
cognitive frame for political practice may be determined by the relationship between "what we know, what we do not know, what we cannot know", but stated that Rumsfeld left out "what we do not like to know". The event has been used in multiple books to discuss
risk assessment. Rumsfeld named his 2011 autobiography
Known and Unknown: A Memoir. In an author's note at the start of the book, he expressly acknowledges the source of his memoir's title and mentions a few examples of his statement's prominence.
The Unknown Known is the title of
Errol Morris's 2013 biographical documentary film about Rumsfeld. In it, Rumsfeld initially defines "unknown knowns" as "the things you think you know, that it turns out you did not", and toward the end of the film he re-defines the term as "things that you know, that you don't know you know". Rumsfeld's comment earned the 2003
Foot in Mouth Award from the British
Plain English Campaign. In April 2003,
Slate columnist Hart Seely arranged Rumsfeld's public statements as
found poetry, presenting the "unknown unknowns" passage as a poem titled "The Unknown". Seely later published a full collection,
Pieces of Intelligence: The Existential Poetry of Donald H. Rumsfeld (2003). The poems were subsequently set to music by pianist Bryant Kong and performed by soprano Elender Wall. ==Historical context==