Sentence examples for knowledge widely from inspiring English sources

Exact(11)

The goal instead is to bring software development into the Internet era by sharing knowledge widely, allowing programmers to build on each other's work and accelerate the pace of software debugging and improvement.

As such, conventional companies would do well to embrace the work-style, the authors note, such as sharing knowledge widely, establishing reputation systems, and creating a community in which people work for peer recognition as much as remuneration.

Government-financed research, foundations, and the prize system (which offers a prize to whoever makes a discovery, and then makes the knowledge widely available, using the power of the market to reap the benefits) are alternatives, with major advantages, and without the inequality-increasing disadvantages of the current intellectual property rights system.

Wikipedia's goal of making existing knowledge widely available is distinctively epistemic, so the question naturally arises as to how well it can achieve its aim.

"Our primary mission is to teach Stanford students," Provost John Etchemendy said, "but it is also the university's mission to disseminate knowledge widely, through textbooks, scholarly publications and so forth.

In fact, as pointed out by Keenan (2015), effective climate change adaptation is best achieved by combining scientific and local forest knowledge and by making this knowledge widely accessible.

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Similar(49)

And while journals were once a means of making knowledge more widely available, they have become, as Mr Shirky noted, a means for restricting access to information.

Some experts on genetics and cloning have expressed skepticism, while others have said that the necessary technical knowledge is widely available and within the expertise of many fertility clinics.

Although there has been much disagreement about the nature of justification, the Platonic definition of knowledge was widely accepted until the mid-20th century, when the American philosopher Edmund L. Gettier produced a startling counterexample.

Intellectual-property law was meant to remedy this by requiring the invention to be vetted by experts, limiting the right to a set period and making knowledge more widely accessible through public disclosure.

Although much of his renown came from such popular books as "The Complete Guide to Beekeeping" (E. P. Dutton), which for many beekeepers is almost as much a necessity as the hives themselves, Dr. Morse's knowledge was widely sought by commercial beekeepers around the world.

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