Dictionary Definition
tacit adj : indicated by necessary connotation
though not expressed directly; "gave silent consent"; "a tacit
agreement"; "the understood provisos of a custody agreement" [syn:
implied, silent, understood]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈtæsɪt/
- Rhymes with: -æsɪt
Adjective
- Done or made in silence; implied, but not expressed;
silent; as, tacit consent is consent by silence, or by not
interposing an objection.
- 1983. ROSEN, Stanley. Plato’s Sophist: The Drama of Original
& Image. South Bend, Indiana, USA: St. Augustine’s Press. p.
62.
- He does this by way of a tacit reference to Homer
- 1983. ROSEN, Stanley. Plato’s Sophist: The Drama of Original
& Image. South Bend, Indiana, USA: St. Augustine’s Press. p.
62.
- Not derived from formal principles of reasoning; based on induction rather than deduction.
Derived terms
Translations
Done or made in silence; implied, but not
expressed; silent
- Finnish: äänetön, hiljainen
- German: stillschweigend
- Portuguese: tácito
Not derived from formal principles of reasoning
- German: stillschweigend
- Portuguese: indutivo
- ttbc Estonian: vaikiv, sõnamatu, väljendamatu
- ttbc Dutch: stilzwijgend, non-verbaal
Extensive Definition
The concept of tacit knowing comes from scientist
and philosopher Michael
Polanyi. It is important to understand that he wrote about a
process (hence tacit knowing) and not a form of knowledge.
However, his phrase has been taken up to name a form of knowledge
that is apparently wholly or partly inexplicable.
Definition
By definition, tacit knowledge is knowledge that
people carry in their minds and is, therefore, difficult to access.
Often, people are not aware of the knowledge
they possess or how it can be valuable to others. Tacit knowledge
is considered more valuable because it provides context for people, places,
ideas, and experiences. Effective transfer of tacit knowledge
generally requires extensive personal contact and trust.
Tacit knowledge is not easily shared. One of
Polanyi's famous aphorisms is: "We know more
than we can tell." Tacit knowledge consists often of habits and
culture that we do not recognize in ourselves. In the field of
knowledge
management the concept of tacit knowledge refers to a knowledge
which is only known by an individual and that is difficult to
communicate to the rest of an organization. Knowledge that is easy
to communicate is called explicit
knowledge. The process of transforming tacit knowledge into
explicit knowledge is known as codification or articulation.
Properties of tacit knowledge
The tacit aspects of knowledge are those that cannot be codified but can be transmitted only via training or gained through personal experience. Alternatively, tacit knowledge can be understood to be knowledge that is embedded in a culture (for instance a regional culture, organizational culture or social culture) and is difficult to share with people not embedded in that culture. Tacit knowledge has been described as "know-how" (as opposed to "know-what" [facts], "know-why" [science] and "know-who" [networking]) . It involves learning and skill but not in a way that can be written down. The knowledge of how to ride a bike is an example: one cannot learn to ride a bike by reading a textbook, it takes personal experimentation and practice to gain the necessary skills.Tacit knowledge has been found to be a crucial
input to the innovation process. A society’s ability to innovate
depends on its level of tacit knowledge of how to innovate. Polanyi
suggested that scientific inquiry could not be reduced to facts,
and that the search for new and novel research problems requires
tacit knowledge about how to approach an unknown. Further writers
have suggested that most laboratory practices, practices that are
vital to the successful reproduction of a scientific experiment,
are tacit (Collins, 2001). Ikujiro
Nonaka and Hirotaka
Takeuchi's book The Knowledge Creating Company (1995) brought
the concept of tacit knowledge into the realm of corporate
innovation. In it, they suggest that Japanese companies are more
innovative because they are able to successfully collectivize
individual tacit knowledge to the firm. The two researchers give
the example of the first Japanese bread maker,
whose development was impossible until the engineers interned
themselves to one of Japan's leading bakers. During their
internship, they were able to learn the tacit movements required to
knead dough, and then transfer this knowledge back to the
company.
An example of the problems of tacit knowledge is
the Bessemer
process--Bessemer sold a patent to his advanced steel making
process and was sued by the purchasers who could not get it to
work–-in the end Bessemer set up his own steel company, which
became one of the largest in the world and changed the face of
steel making.
Tacit knowledge may seem a simple idea but its
implications are large and far reaching. If important knowledge is
tacit, then it cannot be effectively spread through an
organization. This means that useful knowledge will not be able to
reach those who need it without direct, face-to-face contact. It
also means that training newcomers in an organization becomes more
time consuming, because they must be given time to learn on their
own while doing, which reduces overall efficiency. In order to
collectivize and spread tacit knowledge, organizations must invest
greatly in the human
capital of their members.
Failures due to lack of tacit knowledge
- Main article: Law of unintended consequences
Technical specialists acquire a defined body of
formal knowledge during their education, but to be effective they
must acquire tacit knowledge and this is done through a sort of
apprenticeship. So a civil engineer has to first have a degree, and
then several years of experience before he or she can become
chartered. The civil engineer is then deemed to be an effective
practitioner.
By and large, this works well, but, in a
significant number of cases, it does not. As an example, the
proliferation of irrigation-scheme-induced bilharzia and schistosomiasis,
waterborne parasites carried by a certain species of snail, can be attributed the
failure of civil engineers to implement cheap anti-bilharzia
measures. This failure was due to their lack of tacit knowledge and
what is known as the relevance
paradox. The civil
engineers believed that the only relevant knowledge needed to
complete [the project] was of the structural capacities of concrete, maximum water-flow
and pressure, etc. They did not realize that in order to control
the spread of the parasites, they would need also to prevent the
snails (which carried the disease) from multiplying.
Knowledge management
There are many implications for organizational learning and knowledge management, including:- The difficulty inherent in tacit knowledge transfer is that subject matter experts and key knowledge holders may not be aware---hence, unable---to articulate, communicate and describe what they know. Thus, tacit knowledge can be a sustainable competitive advantage.
- Tacit knowledge is embedded in group and organizational relationships, core values, assumptions and beliefs. It is hard to identify, locate, quantify, map or value.
- Tacit knowledge is impossible to transmit through Central media but it can be transmitted by lateral media.
- Tacit knowledge is embedded in human capital. This makes it valuable as a strategic advantage over competitors in terms of innovations, trade secrets, ideas and new technologies.
Controversies
With some regularity there are critical voices arguing that an understanding as formulated above is a mainstream but faulty interpretation of Michael Polanyi's work. Tacit and explicit should not be understood as characteristics of knowledge, which is missing the point that Polanyi was trying to make largely. Polanyi's point was that knowing always had an indispensable personal component. With this he was critiquing an objectivist position of which he was deeply worried for its lack of ethical commitment or considerations. Building on the general ideas from Gestalt-psychology he described a difference between two kinds of awareness: subsidiary and focal awareness. In our focal awareness we are aware of a coherent whole, a Gestalt. In our subsidiary awareness we implicitly are conscious of the different impressions, memories that build this Gestalt. This Gestalt is not given, but it is an achievement, realized by interpretative skills.The whole notion of explicit knowledge as
something that could be captured in an information system is at
odds with this interplay between subsidiary and focal awareness,
just as the mainstream definition of tacit knowledge as something
unknowable or belonging to the subconscious. The tacit can be known
but only in terms of the Gestalt that it bears on. The explicit is
gone in the next moment, when a new Gestalt is formed in the focal
awareness. Polanyi described this interplay between subsidiary and
focal awareness as indwelling. We indwell our interpretative
frameworks so that we order and select our impressions. We indwell
our integrative skills so that we focus on what we want to achieve
and our bodily skills implement what is needed. The focus is a
Gestalt that is produced from the subsidiary particles, just as it
is something that summons bodily skills. The implications of this
paradigm of indwelling (Sanders, 1998), have hardly been touched
upon. Brohm (2005) explains this process of indwelling in terms of
a stage metaphor. On the stage there is a focus in the play, an
event in the theatre play (i.e. focal awareness), pointed at by the
spotlight. Around the light circle on the stage there are actors,
attributes (i.e. impressions). It is the director that has arranged
the parts in such a way that the whole emerged from its parts (i.e.
integrative skills).
The main benefit of this stage metaphor is that
it counters the popular metaphor of the iceberg (the
subconscious/tacit under water, the explicit above water). The
metaphor shows the dynamics and interdependence between explicit
and tacit knowledge. The implications of such a reading of Polanyi
are manifold. Firstly, true discovery comes from an intention to be
submerged in the phenomena under study, thereby emphasizing
participatory observations as a method. Secondly, there is no
knowledge transfer, but it is possible to indwell the actions from
a master in order to gradually reconstruct skills. Thirdly,
knowledge and ethics are inherently connected. There is no neutral
knowledge. Any claim to knowledge reflects a particular standpoint,
interpretative framework etc., as there is no explicit knowledge
that is simply given. Fourthly, since we all have a personal
history, a particular education and socialization there can be
quite different perspectives. But the problems in organizations or
societies can be so complex that different perspectives are
relevant. In such a case organizing should be an emergent process
to allow for differences and even make use of that. Such a
constellation Polanyi named polycentric order.
References
Polanyi, Michael. "The Tacit Dimension". First
published Doubleday & Co, 1966. Reprinted Peter Smith,
Gloucester, Mass, 1983. Chapter 1: "Tacit Knowing".
Bao, Y.; Zhao, S. (2004), "MICRO Contracting for
Tacit Knowledge - A Study of Contractual Arrangements in
International Technology Transfer", in Problems and Perspectives of
Management, 2, 279- 303.
Brohm, R. Bringing Polanyi onto the theatre
stage: a study on Polanyi applied to Knowledge Management, in:
Proceedings of the ISMICK Conference, Erasmus University,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 1999, pp. 57-69.
Brohm, R. "Polycentric Order in Organizations",
published dissertation by ERIM, Erasmus University Rotterdam:
Rotterdam, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1765/6911
Collins, H.M. "Tacit Knowledge, Trust and the Q
of Sapphire" Social Studies of Science' p. 71-85 31(1) 2001
Nonaka, I and Takeuchi, H. The Knowledge Creating
Company Oxford University Press, 1995
Patriotta, G. (2004). Studying organizational
knowledge. Knowledge Management Research and Practice, 2(1).
Sanders, A. F. (1988). Michael Polanyi's post
critical epistemology, a reconstruction of some aspects of 'tacit
knowing. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
Tsoukas, H. (2003) ‘Do we really understand tacit
knowledge?’ in The Blackwell handbook of organizational learning
and knowledge management''. Easterby-Smith and Lyles (eds),
411-427. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishing .
See also
- Knowledge management
- Knowledge management
- Procedural knowledge (know-how)
- Explicit knowledge
- Descriptive knowledge
- Dispersed knowledge
- Relevance Paradox
- Information Routing Group
- Hierarchical incompetence
- Lateral media
- Intuition
- Hidden curriculum
- Cognitive apprenticeship
- Consensus reality
- Community of practice
- Concept map
- Decision making
- Activity theory
- Cultural studies
External links
- Karl E. Sveiby's tacit knowledge web site
- More on tacit knowledge in organizations
- Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind - tacit knowledge
- Tacit knowledge, tacit knowing or behaving? by Stephen Gourlay (PDF)
- The Duality of Knowledge
- Website with many of Eugene Gendlin's papers, and discussions of his practices
- The Spiral of Organizational Knowledge Creation
- Processes of Knowledge Transformation from the ITtoolbox Wiki
tacit in German: Implizites Wissen
tacit in Spanish: Conocimiento tácito
tacit in French: Connaissance tacite
tacit in Korean: 암묵지
tacit in Croatian: Skriveno znanje
tacit in Italian: Conoscenza tacita
tacit in Dutch: Onbewuste kennis
tacit in Japanese: 暗黙知
tacit in Portuguese: Conhecimento tácito
tacit in Russian: Неявное знание
tacit in Finnish: Hiljainen tieto
tacit in Vietnamese: Tri thức ẩn
tacit in Chinese: 隐性知识
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
assumed, implicit, implied, inarticulate, inferred, intimated, silent, suggested, taken for granted,
undeclared, understood, unexpressed, unsaid, unspoken, unstated, unuttered, unvoiced, wordless