Notes
Chapter Two, “Five Dilemmas
of Knowledge Management”
- I. Nonaka and H. Takeuchi, The Knowledge-Creating Company:
How Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of Innovation
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995).
Chapter Three, “Effectively Influencing Up”
- P. F. Drucker, The Essential Drucker (New York: HarperBusiness,
2001), p. 207. - Drucker,The Essential Drucker, p. 212.
- Interview of Marshall Goldsmith, Harvard Business Review,
Oct. 1, 2002, pp. 22–23.
Chapter Four, “Where ‘Managing Knowledge’
Goes Wrong and What to Do Instead”
- Conceived by Alan Turing, a British mathematician who
invented much of the mathematics that provides the founda-
tion for computer science, the Turing Test is a test for machine
intelligence. Essentially, the idea is that if a human being
were at a terminal, communicating with two entities, one com-
puter and one human, over the equivalent of a network con-
nection and could not tell which one was the computer and
which one was the person, we could say that the computer was
intelligent. No computer comes anywhere near passing the
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