“Fear is incomplete knowledge.”
Agatha Christie book Death Comes as the End
(1945)
Source: Death Comes as the End
The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education (1993)
“Fear is incomplete knowledge.”
Agatha Christie book Death Comes as the End
(1945)
Source: Death Comes as the End
W. Edwards Deming (1900–1993) American professor, author, and consultant
The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education (1993)
Peter Sloterdijk (1947) German philosopher
Source: Kritik der zynischen Vernunft [Critique of Cynical Reason] (1983), p. 77
Claude Elwood Shannon (1916–2001) American mathematician and information theorist
Coding theorems for a discrete source with a fidelity criterion. IRE International Convention Records, volume 7, pp. 142--163, 1959.
Context: This duality can be pursued further and is related to a duality between past and future and the notions of control and knowledge. Thus we may have knowledge of the past but cannot control it; we may control the future but have no knowledge of it.
Kurt Lewin (1890–1947) German-American psychologist
Source: 1930s, Principles of topological psychology, 1936, p. viii.
“Through knowledge, you can develop the economy. Without knowledge, you cannot improve a society.”
Newton Lee American computer scientist
American Film Institute (November 4, 2006)
“We can be knowledgeable with other men's knowledge, but we cannot be wise with other men's wisdom.”
Michel De Montaigne (1533–1592) (1533-1592) French-Occitan author, humanistic philosopher, statesman
Book I, Ch. 25
Attributed
Paul Cilliers (1956–2011) South African philosopher
Paul Cilliers (2005: 263) as quoted in: Vikki Bell (2007) Culture and Performance: The Challenge of Ethics, Politics and Feminist Theory. p. 8
Peter L. Berger book The Social Construction of Reality
Source: The Social Construction of Reality, 1966, p. 46