|
From knowledge-creation to the perfecting of
action: Tao, Basho and pure experience as the ultimate ground of
knowing
Abstract: The idea of knowledge-creation and knowledge management
has become an important area of research in management studies.
This preoccupation with the creation and accumulation of knowledge
in its explicit representational form is underpinned by the epistemological
priorities of an alphabetic-literate culture that takes written
knowledge as the only reliable basis for effective action. Documented
knowledge necessarily precedes and hence determines action and performance.
Such a metaphysical orientation precludes the possibility of attaining
a form of direct unmediated knowing through the relentless perfecting
of action. In traditionally based oral-aural communities or in non-alphabetic
East Asian cultures knowing is more often achieved directly through
the immediate engagement of tasks rather than through the acquisition
of abstract written signs and symbols: learning by direct observation
and doing is the order of the day. Consequently, there is little
systematic documenting and recording of knowledge in the written
form that one finds in abundance in contemporary western cultures.
Yet this apparent lack has not prevented such predominantly non-alphabetic
eastern cultures from achieving outstanding levels of performance
in the arts, sport and in business. This would suggest that the
current obsession with knowledge-creation and the presumed route
of knowledge-creation-application-performance is a peculiarly western
preoccupation and that it represents only one avenue of possibility
for achieving effective action. This has significant implications
for our understanding of the relationship among knowledge, action
and performance.
| Author: |
Chia, R.
|
| Publisher: |
|
| Date: |
2003 |
Back to Knowledge Management
Bibliography Index
|