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The Tacit Dimension

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?I shall reconsider human knowledge by starting from the fact that we can know more than we can tell,? writes Michael Polanyi, whose work paved the way for the likes of Thomas Kuhn and Karl Popper. The Tacit Dimension argues that tacit knowledge?tradition, inherited practices, implied values, and prejudgments?is a crucial part of scientific knowledge. Back in print for a new generation of students and scholars, this volume challenges the assumption that skepticism, rather than established belief, lies at the heart of scientific discovery. ?Polanyi?s work deserves serious attention. . . . [This is a] compact presentation of some of the essentials of his thought.??Review of Metaphysics ?Polanyi?s work is still relevant today and a closer examination of this theory that all knowledge has personal and tacit elements . . . can be used to support and refute a variety of widely held approaches to knowledge management.??Electronic Journal of Knowledge "The reissuing of this remarkable book give us a new opportunity to see how far-reaching?and foundational?Michael Polanyi's ideas are, on some of the age-old questions in philosophy."?Amartya Sen, from the new Foreword

108 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1966

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About the author

Michael Polanyi

32 books109 followers
Michael Polanyi was a Hungarian-British polymath, who made important theoretical contributions to physical chemistry, economics, and philosophy.

His wide-ranging research in physical science included chemical kinetics, x-ray diffraction, and adsorption of gases.

He argued that positivism supplies a false account of knowing, which if taken seriously undermines humanity's highest achievements.

He pioneered the theory of fibre diffraction analysis in 1921, and the dislocation theory of plastic deformation of ductile metals and other materials in 1934. He emigrated to Germany, in 1926 becoming a chemistry professor at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, and then in 1933 to England, becoming first a chemistry professor, and then a social sciences professor at the University of Manchester. In 1944 Polanyi was elected to the Royal Society.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 53 reviews
Profile Image for Ryan Holiday.
Author 91 books18k followers
June 22, 2012
Polanyi's premise is that we know more than we can tell. Think about the face of someone you know well. Try to describe it. You probably can't. But if the police were to subject you to their technique of using photo albums to identify the different features of the face, you'd likely end up with a workable approximation. This is tacit knowledge and we rely on it more often than we admit. Scientists, he says, are not only not explicitly aware of the experiments that came before them, but they take them for granted during their own. We think of scientists as explorers of the unknown, but in reality they often have an idea of where they going even on totally new ground. They have vague notion of what they wish to discover - a tacit understanding - and able to recognize it as it is confirmed. Polayni's work was influential to Thomas Kuhn, who wrote The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. I had trouble reading Kuhn about a year ago and had to stop. After I read Polayni, I was able try again and slowly make my way through the whole thing. I feel better for having read both books and can now see their implications on a regular basis. In my recommendation to read them, I would suggest following a similar order.
Profile Image for Nelson Zagalo.
Author 15 books465 followers
May 2, 2018
Uma obra que discute a impossibilidade da redução da ação humana a meros algoritmos. De caráter filosófico, porque aquilo que defende não é em si mesmo passível de circunscrição metodológica. Uma obra essencial para quem quiser compreender a interação humana.
Profile Image for Joshua.
371 reviews18 followers
February 24, 2020
Polanyi is brilliant - I will certainly be reading more of him.

The first point of this book is that we know more than we can articulate: this is called tacit knowledge. This is because when we know something, we recognize wholes, not particulars: we absorb the particulars. For instance, we can easily recognize a face, but cannot usually tell what in particular distinguishes it from other faces. The police, for instance, can get around this problem by creating collages of facial features to identify a suspect, and the reason they have to resort to pictures and not a description is that we recognise things as wholes before we identify particulars. Knowledge thus has an 'indwelling' aspect to it: the particulars indwell us and are tacit. This structure of knowledge extends also to our use of instruments. We 'possess' a telescope and use it to extend our being to see things we are not normally able to see. We do this without necessarily knowing all the mechanical details of how the lenses work, how the light is refracted etc: these are particulars that are present but subservient to the larger whole of recognising an object outside ourselves. The role of mechanic and driver show this distinction well: the mechanic may have an intimate understanding of how a car works, but be a bad driver. Conversely, the driver may be excellent, but lack understanding of car mechanics. Artist and critic are also similar in this regard. Both are necessary, but one role is in a sense higher or basic: the critic and mechanic cannot exist without the prior existence and 'excess' of the whole (art or travel). No matter how much work a mechanic does, they cannot create driving or travel: they are always subservient to this larger whole, which encompasses a larger reality than they can.

This creates a curious possibility regarding scientific discovery: We recognize a whole scientific truth before we identify the particulars that might support and give body to it. This wholeness is what gives scientific theories their beauty. It is also why theories are pursued in the face of intense opposition (such as that faced by Copernicus), and why they may take many years to be properly varified. This fits with a traditional metaphysic: we accept a reality of being that impresses itself on our understanding before we can fully understand it (and we may never understand it). Science is thus a pursuit of actual truth, not mere utility, as is commonly thought.

Profile Image for jasmine sun.
173 reviews397 followers
August 7, 2025
came for the refutation of positivism, stayed for the heartfelt odes to scientific creativity

I previously associated “tacit knowledge” with physical know-how (e.g. cooking), but Polanyi actually focuses on intellectual intuitions—tacit knowledge as interiorizing a theory so you can apply it easily, having the right “hunches” about what research problems are worth pursuing

I also found the writing quite beautiful:

> My account of scientific discovery describes an existential choice. We start the pursuit of discovery by pouring ourselves into the subsidiary elements of a problem and we continue to spill ourselves into further clues as we advance further, so that we ar­rive at discovery fully committed to it as an aspect of reality.
Profile Image for Fernando Valadares.
5 reviews1 follower
April 7, 2021
First chapter about tacit knowledge was interesting and useful at a personal level. His ideas are supported by a very limited number of experiments, but I think that's ok given that those studies in psychology were only nascent at the time (so I have been told). Also the author abuses of careless language such as "we conclude that..." or "it was proven in this chapter that...", which is unexpected from a scientist like him, but also excusable.

Up to this point I was enjoying the read and looking forward to chapter two. I had heard people talking about emergent phenomena before and seemed like a reasonable concept, so I had an open mind. Even so, I was shocked by Polanyi's ideas. He defends the so-called strong emergence, which is an antireducionist position which states that a system cannot be described in terms of its constituent parts. But more than that: his arguments have a concealed (tacit, if you will) spiritual/supernatural undertone, in which he assumes Humanity to be in the apex of nature and still not to be ruled by its laws somehow.

If you think I'm misunderstanding his points, all I can say in my defense is that I read the book very carefully. But I can't help a bad writer. Chapter 1 begins by introducing a political and historical context that is simply ignored until mid third chapter, although it plays a central part in his motivation. Chapter 2 doesn't have a clear thesis, and his ideas are all over the place. He shamelessly uses concepts such as good and evil without introducing them beforehand, which makes his thoughts even more ill-defined.

In summary: sloppy writing, unbacked claims, and lack of focus. If you are interested in this book, I recommend the first chapter and no more than that. If you are interested in reading about emergent phenomena, read the essay "More is different" by P. W. Anderson.
Profile Image for Zachary.
699 reviews14 followers
November 28, 2018
I originally dove into this work hoping it would better unfold Polanyi’s concept of tacit knowing or tacit knowledge. But I think, in the end, his Tacit Dimension is essentially a place where tacit knowing forms the foundation for human growth and expansion of knowledge. Polanyi seems to have a slightly meandering strategy to his organization, and about halfway through he really zeros in on what he perceives as a malformed concept of evolution. He strives to redefine this through his concept of tacit knowing, and I think he lands in a place which has interesting implications or congruences with Christianity (though he seems to have this less in mind). Ultimately he lands the book with a stronger argument for the expansion of scientific knowledge and understanding than he does defining tacit knowing in any thorough sense.

Do I recommend this book? Less so. I suspect if you’ve never read Polanyi or any of his works, this will be the least helpful introduction to his works and concepts. But it’s a shorter and decently easy read, so it has that going for it. For the most part I enjoy how he thinks, though his applications when it comes to religion fall short (he was a trained scientist, not theologian, so his failure is understandable). All in all, I think this work clarifies some of his thoughts which are more thoroughly covered in other works. Not bad, but it doesn’t stand too well on its own.
Profile Image for Jeremy.
774 reviews40 followers
June 20, 2022
Polanyi connects epistemology and emergence theory. Interesting
Profile Image for Boris.
1 review5 followers
June 8, 2018
Highly highly highly recommended.
A renowned scientist (he taught 3 Nobel winners) takes on the general understanding of "scientific knowledge" with the simple premise: "We know more than we can say."

This is all about "tacit knowledge" versus "explicit knowledge", from the perspective of philosophy of science… and he even gets a bit into critical theory and politics (correctly, IMV).

Lemme know if you want to borrow.
Profile Image for Amy Smith.
109 reviews4 followers
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July 13, 2022
In the 1960s, Hungarian-British scientist and philosopher Michael Polanyi laid out his theory of tacit knowledge. According to this theory, learning and discovery is a process that is often difficult if not impossible to explain, and happens through the integration of concepts and actions we perceive in others. Through this process, we develop an awareness of how something “should” be done and what is expected to result from it. We may see someone else do it, we may read about it in a book, or we may use our imagination. This is how we are able to take actions toward what we want to be able to know or do. At some point we may actually integrate knowledge without being able to describe precisely how we did it.

Breakthroughs in scientific knowledge stem also from the tacit dimension, a sort of gut feeling we have that there’s a truth yet to be discovered. Polanyi describes this process as a leap-of-faith that happens within a bounded potential that emerges from previous knowledge and experience, morals, the sociopolitical environment, physics, and societal expectations. In this theoretical framework, science isn’t the objective and dispassionate endeavor it’s proclaimed to be, but rather one outcome of collective thinking that raises objectivity above other virtues as indispensable.

Polanyi’s ideas feel very relevant today, a time when history, science, and knowledge structures are being actively re-examined through the lens of intersectionality. He describes a “society of explorers” that seeks unknown truths and challenges existing constructs – a society that needs to be safeguarded and fostered. A message I imagine rang very true in the 60s, and still does today.

“Any tradition fostering the progress of thought must have this intention: to teach its current ideas as stages leading on to unknown truths which, when discovered, might dissent from the very teachings which engendered them. Such a tradition assures the independence of its followers by transmitting the conviction that thought has intrinsic powers, to be evoked in men’s minds by intimations of hidden truths. It respects the individual for being capable of such response: for being able to see a problem not visible to others, and to explore it on his own responsibility. Such are the metaphysical grounds of intellectual life in a free, dynamic society: the principles which safeguard intellectual life in such a society. I call this a society of explorers.”
Profile Image for Maria Copeland.
431 reviews16 followers
June 29, 2024
I really liked this, despite occasionally getting quite lost. I think I'm convinced by the first two sections, which are more abstractly about the function and nature of tacit knowledge compared to the third's application of tacit knowledge to a "society of explorers"; it didn't totally land for me, but that could be more about my ignorance in relation to philosophy of science conversations than Polanyi's reasoning. Much to consider!
2 reviews
June 23, 2025
every single word is intentional. I can only hope to write with such knowledge and clarity.
Profile Image for Jacob Aitken.
1,687 reviews419 followers
October 24, 2024
Polanyi, Michael. The Tacit Dimension. University of Chicago, 1966 [2009].

If you want to begin reading Michael Polanyi, and you should want that, I have good news and bad news about this book. First the good news: it is short and many of his arguments are to the point. In some ways, he clarifies arguments from Personal Knowledge. Now the bad news: it is difficult. Be prepared for that.

Before we begin, we have to define and emphasize two key terms: proximal and distal.

Proximal: the particulars
Distal: the meaning of a term or entity

His argument is straightforward: knowledge has a from-to character. In other words, we know the primary term only by relying on our awareness of it for attending to the second (Polanyi 10). The first term is proximal, or tacit. The second term is distal. The proximal term represents the particulars in knowledge. As Polanyi notes, “Our body is the ultimate instance of all our knowing” (15). Polanyi does not use the metaphor, but our body is the interface between our mind and the outside world.

Thus, we “interiorize” the knowing process. This is “to identify ourselves with the teachings in question” (17). The proximal term of tacit knowledge establishes the framework, integrating the particulars. In Polanyi’s fine phrase, we are “not looking at particulars but dwelling in them” (18).

Dealing with the problem raised by Plato’s Meno, Polanyi explores the paradoxical nature of research. How does one find a good topic to research? On one hand, it has to be original, yet on the other hand there is no guarantee it will be good. At best, we are merely guessing at a coherence before we have the particulars. Plato, by contrast, did not see that we can know things we cannot tell, at least on the tacit level.

Our body is invested in our perceptions. That is how it participates in the knowing process. The body’s (tacit) knowing expands into the world, gaining new sets of particulars (29).

There is a correspondence (in tacit knowledge) between the structure of comprehension and the structure of the comprehended entity which is its object (33-34).

Levels of Tacit Knowing

The proximal level is the foundation. The distal builds upon it, yet the proximal can never account for the range of knowledge. For instance, one’s vocabulary builds upon phonetics, yet phonetics can never limit the range of knowledge (36). The distal relies on the provincial but its operations are not explained by it. This leads to the problem of emergence. Higher levels control the boundary conditions left open by the operation of the next lower level (45). In other words, “a level can only come into existence through a process not manifest in the lower level.”

Kataphysical Knowledge

Knowledge is personal but also subject to and shaped by impersonal requirements. This might be what Thomas Torrance called “Kataphysical knowledge.” Far from an impersonal knower, the scientist is engaged in “imagination seeking discovery” (79).

Conclusion

This is necessary reading for the student of Polanyi, but most people would be better served by reading Esther Lightcap Meeks.
Profile Image for subzero.
387 reviews28 followers
November 23, 2021
Blew my mind how in about five pages it dismantled both some of my deeply held beliefs about science, and provided a language for my growing disquiet about existentialism. What is frustrating is that while he writes in broad terms about the moral perfectionism-nihilism conflict and hints at the solution for them being in understanding the tacit and the levels of knowledge, he does not expound on these. I mean, he could have done my homework for me, is all I'm saying.
Profile Image for Thomas Armstrong.
Author 54 books107 followers
May 31, 2014
I found some good things in this brief book. I loved his description of how tacit knowing is dismembered by attempts to break it down into explicit knowing. This resonated with me because it is so much of what goes on in the schools. Teaching kids the rules of grammar, for example, instead of teaching them how to actually write. I also really liked his challenge to the positivist conception of the world, showing how scientists are people with ambitions, beliefs, and drives that seek to unveil a world of hidden possibilities within a community of like-driven individuals. A good work to accompany Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions. I have to say, though, that much of the book was somewhat tedious to me, his analytic approach to dissecting the components of tacit knowing (e.g. proximal and distal), which actually smacked a bit of explicit knowing (I know what he means by tacit knowing, but when he breaks it down, my understanding starts to fall apart!). Also, his hierarchical description of units of meaning (e.g. sounds, words, sentences, styles etc.), although I actually do a workshop on literacy using these distinctions, so maybe I'm bored with myself! I liked his society of explorers concept - I wondered how much it might be related to Popper's Open Society (which I still have to read). Also, the fact that he knew Bakhunin and was inspired to develop these ideas in reaction to Stalinist scientism, was quite interesting to me, given that I'm reading two books on Stalin in the thirties, right now. I've always wanted to read some Polanyi since I was an undergraduate at the University of Massachusetts and I saw everybody walking around with a copy of Personal Knowledge under their arm. I think I'll stop at this book, however, given that I have now a tacit sense of what he's talking about.
Profile Image for Jim Hurley.
42 reviews14 followers
September 9, 2015
A worthwhile read for a quick intro into the unique thoughts of Polanyi on epistemology and the Philosophy of Science. The idea of the involvement of tacit knowledge in our day-to-day activities is intriguing, much like the proverbial part of the iceberg that is immersed, and unseen.

He develops his argument well, with salient examples, and then he expands his basic principle into numerous applications. I like his depiction of reality as a series of successive levels, each with different rules, but with a dependence of the rules on a previous level. At the basic level, this was clarified by the example of the behavior of a single molecule versus a chemical reaction involving kinetics and a mass of molecules. Perhaps one can extrapolate this principle for example, and compare the rules that govern individual human behavior (morality) versus the rules that govern societies of individuals (ethics), and the ties that bind them.

He also rides this principle of succeeding levels of reality into sufficiently complex upper levels that demonstrate emergent properties, such as the evolution of life - very interesting stuff. I didn't like, though, how he bridged the challenging-to-explain gap between inanimate and animate matter with the speculation that religion could offer an answer. The gap is complicated and mysterious, but does not necessitate a religious explanation.
Profile Image for Dan.
79 reviews
October 11, 2014
A dense, yet clear, well-organized and brief exposition on human knowledge, hinging on the thesis that we know more than we think we do. Much of what we know is subconscious, not in an id vs. ego sort of way, but in a background vs. focus sort of way. I found his example of identifying faces particularly enlightening. We may not be very good at attaching a name to a face, or even describe facial features in detail, but we'll instantly be able to identify a person by his/her face if we encounter it again. Thus our knowledge of the particulars of a person's face is hidden from our conscious knowledge, though we made use of this information to identify someone.

Polanyi expands on this idea of tacit knowing to discuss how scientific discoveries are made, what motivates scientists, and moving beyond the positivistic notion that science relies on totally impersonal mechanisms for validation. He even critiques modern notions that reject truth for the purpose of moral perfection. His proposed solution may surprise you.

If you are interested in epistemology, or the study of how we know what we know, then this book is for you.
Profile Image for Rafael.
20 reviews4 followers
December 2, 2021
A short and powerful summary of Polanyi's theory of tacit knowledge. The style is not overly academic given that it's based on a series of lectures.
The foreword by Amartya Sen is quite helpful, as it highlights the key concepts that are then elaborated.
Profile Image for Penny.
254 reviews5 followers
did-not-finish
August 16, 2008
Somehow I am understanding every individual word and every individual sentence without really understanding the meaning of anything...
Profile Image for Daniel Stepke.
130 reviews5 followers
January 30, 2024
Still trying to digest this one, will be looking over it for a while yet. (I get it now, on the fence, but mostly convinced).
1 review3 followers
June 8, 2012
Tactic learning as an emergent property of our physiology and patterns of cognition...
Profile Image for James.
536 reviews5 followers
August 3, 2017
With the premise that we know more than we can tell, Polanyi sets up an interesting study of how we function, think, and apply logic. The premise is established with the simple statements: "I shall reconsider human knowledge by starting from the fact that we know more than we can tell. This fact seems obvious enough, though it is not easy to say exactly what it means. Take an example. We know a person's face, and can recognize it among a thousand, indeed among a million. Yet we usually cannot tell how we recognize a face we know." In this way he sets up the argument that we possess the ability to have "tacit" knowledge which we know nut struggle to share.

When one discusses learning, one can consider the fact that it requires some form of tacit knowledge to develop in the student - the learned cooperation between the offered knowledge and how the student applies tacit knowledge to grow in intellect. Polanyi argues that "sciences study physiognomies that cannot be fully described in words, nor even in pictures." The book examines experiments that demonstrated that people have this tacit knowledge even if they do not know they have the knowledge themselves or are unable to share or convey the knowledge to others. As an educator, I read these elements with interest as Polanyi readily points out that tacit knowledge means that information beyond particulars is still able to offer elements of the "true conceptions of things." There are elements of "dual control" - the laws of what govern a discipline must be mitigated by the "comprehensive entity" that form an understanding of the law itself - what we know but cannot share still works to determine what we know well.

Polanyi ends up adding to and simultaneously critiquing educational thoughts by Dewey and other educators. It would be interesting to strike comparisons between Polanyi's arguments for how tacit knowledge is required for an understanding of our understanding and how Paulo Freire argues for learning based on understanding the student as an educator themselves.

The book is insightful and sets up many good discussions and considerations. A solid read for anyone interested in knowing, learning, or understanding.
Profile Image for path.
351 reviews34 followers
October 28, 2021
Polanyi offers an insightful examination of tacit knowledge, that which we "know but cannot say." He sets the study in the context of science and its pursuit of objective knowledge of the world through skepticism and methodological purification, but the arguments apply more broadly to other knowledge pursuits.

Through three lectures, Polanyi argues that the tacit dimension is a realm of knowing that we comprehend (or maybe intuit) but do not articulate. Nevertheless, what we comprehend tacitly guides our explicit, concrete practices of knowledge creation. It guides our selection of problems to attend to, our choice of techniques, and our moment-by-moment assessment of whether something is right or wrong. The more skilled we become in any kind of practice (whether riding a bicycle, driving, singing, or doing an experiment) the more likely we are to look through the particulars of our actions to the more distant intent that is guiding those actions. In doing so, we are looking into the realm of comprehension and knowing that encompasses and mediates the more particular areas of knowledge. Areas of knowledge creation that focus outward (e.g., psychology, sociology, literature, art) afford us some glimpse of what might motivate the particulars of our actions. This tacit realm is then the seat of knowledge production: it provides the exigence, the selection of problems, and the hunches and intuitions that drive the development of more specific questions or concrete attempts at forming knowledge that are the particulars of knowledge creation. We bring our specific knowledge practices into coordination with what we understand tacitly. Although (and this is me speaking) surely there must be times when our tacit understanding of a situation is just play wrong because we cannot form an accurate tacit comprehension of something. I am not sure how concrete knowledge practices that conflict with tacit comprehension work backwards to change our tacit sensibilities. Maybe that, too, is a function of art and literature.

For such a slender book, it puts up a fight. As clearly as Polanyi is able to describe something as ineffable as tacit knowledge, readers will need to give it a measure and half of attention.
86 reviews1 follower
March 26, 2025
Tengo sentimientos encontrados respecto a este libro. Por un lado, me ha resultado muy inspirador el proceso de reflexión que desarrolla sobre el conocimiento tácito. Sin embargo, no comparto su manera de conceptualizarlo. La denominada “estructura del conocimiento tácito” (compuesta por un “término proximal” y un “término distal”) me parece imprecisa y, en mi opinión, no abarca todas las posibles situaciones.

Los otros dos capítulos que componen el libro tampoco terminaron de convencerme. En “Emergencia”, aunque presenta intuiciones valiosas, considero que la sección sobre jerarquías contiene numerosas debilidades conceptuales. En cuanto al tercer capítulo, “Sociedad de exploradores”, me resulta francamente desacertado. No percibo una tesis definida, su conexión con el resto de la obra es difusa y los argumentos carecen de una dirección clara.

Me quedo con dos ejemplos muy buenos sobre las implicaciones del conocimiento tácito en ciencia. Por un lado, sobre la aparente contradicción de seleccionar un problema sobre el que investigar: ¿cómo podemos escoger un buen problema de investigación si no conocemos de antemano su solución? Detectar un problema es ver algo que está oculto. Es tener indicio de la coherencia de detalles no comprendidos hasta ahora. El problema es bueno si esta insinuación es verdadera, y es original si nadie más puede ver las posibilidades de la comprensión que estamos anticipando. Esto genera la contradicción que Platón señaló en el Menón: si sabemos lo que buscamos, no hay problema; si no lo sabemos, ¿cómo reconocerlo? Esta paradoja nos lleva a aceptar el conocimiento tácito como parte esencial del proceso investigador.

La otra tiene que ver con la corriente del positivismo científico, la cual solo cree que el único conocimiento válido es el conocimiento formal. Polanyi demuestra que esta visión va en contra de la propia ciencia, pues al negar la existencia del conocimiento tácito, dejamos fuera gran parte del saber que realmente utilizamos en la práctica científica. Las múltiples evidencias de conocimiento tácito que presenta el autor revelan que la ciencia no puede reducirse a fórmulas y procedimientos explícitos sin perder su esencia.
Profile Image for A. B..
572 reviews13 followers
May 28, 2023
This short little book is a fascinating collection of ideas! Polanyi describes tacit knowledge, how we always seem know more than we know that we know; connecting this to emergence theory as higher levels of organization work in a different level without knowledge of the particulars that define the lower level of organization. We perceive things at a holistic level without necessarily noting the particulars, like in our knowledge of human faces; and particularistic knowledge might actually hinder our holistic perceptions. He connects this to evolutionary theory where sentience is something that operates at a higher level and is inexplicable by solely material factors. He then moves on to connect this to scientific progress, where scientific progress is made through a process of identifying a theory based on a holistic perception of the world; and are not solely explicable in terms of the particular factors.

Through tacit knowledge, he also shows us the importance tradition plays in science.
He also explores how scientific research works through systems of mutual control etc. Science is however for him a system of seeking pure truth and not utility as reality is something we always know more of than we can tell. He concludes that we should encourage a 'society of explorers', where individual freedom of though to radically upturn disciplines is encouraged; and instead of a dogmatic pedagogy, scientific truths are taught as stages leading on to unknown truths. All fascinating ideas!
Profile Image for Tara Brabazon.
Author 41 books514 followers
November 10, 2024
This book was originally published in 1966. Michael Polanyi was an old man - an old scholar - at this point. He was a master of scholarship, research and writing. Reading this book is like watching Spencer Tracy in Guess who's coming to dinner? A master of the content and the form. Confident. Stroppy. But also generous for what may come next.

This book - just like Polanyi's career - could not happen now. It was formed by long sabbaticals at posh universities. It was formed by delivering a delicate lecture series at these posh universities. In our post-lecture, post-research, post-intellectually generous time, this book would not be written. Who attends lectures? Who thinks deeply and offers robust commentary on the content presented, rather than their ego-fuelled, next big thing?

This book has confidence. And it is contagious in that confidence. If you are interested in thinking about knowledge, and the knowledge that we do not know - but may wish to - then this is a foundational text. Beside learning about the concept of 'tacit knowing,' we also see what we have lost from the history of ideas. And the profound consequences of that loss from our universities.
Profile Image for Caroline.
66 reviews3 followers
March 8, 2017
Polanyi sets out to argue that "We know more than we can tell" in a beautiful defense of what he calls "tacit knowing" (akin if not equal to "intuition," it seems). He goes on to explain that tacit knowing is the foundation of all knowledge including science and so to claim that science is completely objective and somehow then superior to all other pursuits of knowledge is both ridiculous and false.

Honestly, I'll need to read it through again (or more than that, even) before I feel confidant enough to really critique Polanyi's work here. That said, the thoughts in this book are exciting and Polanyi is so precise with his language that you have to follow carefully basically every word. It's a well-written, tight little book, and its ideas crucial to the study of intuition and epistemology.
Profile Image for Russell Fox.
423 reviews55 followers
October 7, 2021
This is a wonderful little collection, featuring three lectures given by Michael Polanyi in 1961. They are very much creatures of the mid-20th century, what with their references to Gestalt psychology and the like. Still, Polanyi's ideas about the nature of knowledge and scientific understanding, about how our always-already (that's a Heideggerianism which I don't apologize for; though Polanyi never cites him, there are constant examples throughout the lectures of wording and conceptualizations which are coming out of the exact same phenomenological tradition that Heidegger did) tacit grasp of the "comprehensive entity" enables are knowledge of empirical particulars, and what all of that has to do with questions of innovation, technique, and more, are as relevant as ever. A short, dense, rewarding read.
Profile Image for Al Maki.
662 reviews24 followers
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August 27, 2022
It’s a collection of three dense but clear lectures he delivered in the early ‘60s. He offers a philosophical justification for pure research and free inquiry in general. He builds his case on three ideas. First that we know more than we can say, second that the qualities of complex things cannot be derived from their constituents, third the gradual increase in a clearer understanding of the external world through free inquiry and disagreement. The argument itself is quite dense.
Polanyi was interested in the topic by the Soviet dismissal of the concept of pure science but the need to argue for open inquiry and open and rational disagreement is as great today as then.
I was drawn to it by an interest in both tacit knowledge/embodied knowledge and the concept of emergence, but he uses the ideas as a basis rather than exploring them.
1 review
September 16, 2024
I bought and read this book. "The Tacit Dimension" by Michael Polanyi is a seminal work that delves into the concept of tacit knowledge and its crucial role in the process of knowing. Polanyi's exploration of how we understand and interact with the world beyond explicit, codified information is thought-provoking and insightful. In this book, Polanyi challenges the traditional view of knowledge as solely explicit and objective, arguing that much of what we know is rooted in personal experience such as playing geometry dash breeze, intuition, and tacit understanding. He emphasizes the importance of tacit knowledge in various fields, from scientific discovery to artistic creation, highlighting its role in shaping human cognition and innovation.
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143 reviews20 followers
October 17, 2017
Fundamental reading toward my dissertation on philosophy of philosophy as everyday life. Tacit knowledge works with both American Pragmatism and phenomenologically inclined notions of counter-epistemologies. will lay a very interesting groundwork on metaphilosophy and everydayness through the lens of intuition and asymptotic knowledge

no one reads these reviews but if you do, I am going to begin making notes on the books I read here to help organize as I proceed in developing my dissertation prospectus
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