The realNEO Formula: k=ic2
Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 08/01/2010 - 16:12.
knowledge = inclusion x community (public + private)
knowl·edge n.
- The state or fact of knowing.
- Familiarity, awareness, or understanding gained through experience or study.
- The sum or range of what has been perceived, discovered, or learned.
- Learning; erudition: teachers of great knowledge.
- Specific information about something.
e·qual adj.
- Having the same quantity, measure, or value as another.
- Mathematics. Being the same or identical to in value.
- Having the same privileges, status, or rights: equal before the law.
- Being the same for all members of a group: gave every player an equal chance to win.
- Having the requisite qualities, such as strength or ability, for a task or situation: “Elizabeth found herself quite equal to the scene” (Jane Austen).
- Adequate in extent, amount, or degree.
- Impartial; just; equitable.
- Tranquil; equable.
- Showing or having no variance in proportion, structure, or appearance.
in·clu·sion n.
- The act of including or the state of being included.
- Something included.
- Geology. A solid, liquid, or gaseous foreign body enclosed in a mineral or rock.
- Biology. A nonliving mass, such as a droplet of fat, in the cytoplasm of a cell.
- Computer Science. A logical operation that assumes the second statement of a pair is true if the first one is true.
times prep.
- Multiplied by
-
com·mu·ni·ty n.
- A group of people living in the same locality and under the same government.
- The district or locality in which such a group lives.
- A group of people having common interests: the scientific community; the international business community.
- A group viewed as forming a distinct segment of society: the gay community; the community of color.
- Similarity or identity: a community of interests.
- Sharing, participation, and fellowship.
pub·lic adj.
- Of, concerning, or affecting the community or the people: the public good.
- Maintained for or used by the people or community: a public park.
- Capitalized in shares of stock that can be traded on the open market: a public company.
- Participated in or attended by the people or community: “Opinions are formed in a process of open discussion and public debate” (Hannah Arendt).
- Connected with or acting on behalf of the people, community, or government: public office.
- Enrolled in or attending a public school: transit passes for public students.
- Open to the knowledge or judgment of all: a public scandal.
pri·vate adj.
- Secluded from the sight, presence, or intrusion of others: a private hideaway.
- Designed or intended for one's exclusive use: a private room.
- Of or confined to the individual; personal: a private joke; private opinions
- Undertaken on an individual basis: private studies; private research.
- Of, relating to, or receiving special hospital services and privileges: a private patient.
- Not available for public use, control, or participation: a private club; a private party.
- Belonging to a particular person or persons, as opposed to the public or the government: private property.
- Of, relating to, or derived from nongovernment sources: private funding.
- Conducted and supported primarily by individuals or groups not affiliated with governmental agencies or corporations: a private college; a private sanatorium.
- Enrolled in or attending a private school: a private student.
- Not holding an official or public position: a private citizen.
- Not for public knowledge or disclosure; secret: private papers; a private communication.
- Not appropriate for use or display in public; intimate: private behavior; a private tragedy.
- Placing a high value on personal privacy: a private person.
Copyright 2002 Norm Roulet - 12.13.03
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