The knowledge pyramid: a critique of the DIKW hierarchy
Journal of Information Science Frické 35 (2): 131
by Martin Frické
Abstract: The paper evaluates the
data-information-knowledge-wisdom (DIKW) hierarchy. This hierarchy,
also known as the 'knowledge hierarchy', is part of the canon of
information science and management. Arguments are offered that the
hierarchy is unsound and methodologically undesirable. The paper
identifies a central logical error that DIKW makes. The paper also
identifies the dated and unsatisfactory philosophical positions of
operationalism and inductivism as the philosophical backdrop to the
hierarchy. The paper concludes with a sketch of some positive theories,
of value to information science, on the nature of the components of the
hierarchy: that data is anything recordable in a semantically and
pragmatically sound way, that information is what is known in other
literature as 'weak knowledge', that knowledge also is 'weak knowledge'
and that wisdom is the possession and use, if required, of wide
practical knowledge, by an agent who appreciates the fallible nature of
that knowledge.
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