Joseph Nye (1937) American political scientist
Source: Understanding International Conflicts: An Introduction to Theory and History (6th ed., 2006), Chapter 8, The Information Revolution and the Diffusion of Power, p. 252.
Source: "The economics of information," 1961, p. 213 ; lead paragraph
Joseph Nye (1937) American political scientist
Source: Understanding International Conflicts: An Introduction to Theory and History (6th ed., 2006), Chapter 8, The Information Revolution and the Diffusion of Power, p. 252.
Kōki Hirota (1878–1948) Japanese politician executed
Quoted in "British Relations with China" - Page 138 - by Irving Sigmund Friedman - History - 1940.
“[…]a person stops searching for information and knowledge of one’s self, ignorance sets in.”
Robert T. Kiyosaki (1947) American finance author , investor
Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money-That the Poor and the Middle Class Do Not!
William H. Starbuck (1934) American academic
Source: Learning by knowledge‐intensive firms," 1992, p. 716
Context: In deciding whether a firm is knowledge-intensive, one ought to weigh its emphasis on esoteric expertise instead of widely shared knowledge. Everybody has knowledge, most of it widely shared, but some idiosyncratic and personal. If one defines knowledge broadly to encompass what everybody knows, every firm can appear knowledge-intensive. One loses the value of focusing on a special category of firms. Similarly, every firm has some unusual expertise. To make the knowledge-intensive firm a useful category, one has to require that exceptional expertise make important contributions. One should not label a firm as knowledge-intensive unless exceptional and valuable expertise dominates commonplace knowledge.
John C. Maxwell (1947) American author, speaker and pastor
Book Sometimes you win Sometimes you Learn
Georges Cuvier (1769–1832) French naturalist, zoologist and paleontologist (1769–1832)
as stated in 1796 before the National Institute of Sciences and Arts in Paris, concerning fossil elephants.
Jay W. Lorsch (1932) American organizational theorist
Lorsch & Thomas J. Tierney (2002), Aligning stars, p. 73