For the last
year and a half, I have been focused on physical health; something I neglected
for far too long. For 2022, I will continue to focus on physical health, but I will
be incorporating mental health as well.
Typically, I
use this blog to post my reviews of books that I have read throughout the year,
but this year, I am also going to use it to follow my journey through a book
called The Daily Stoic. I did not realize that there was also a daily
reflection journal as well, so I may miss some of the reflection points as I
did not purchase it. I am new to Stoicism, so I am not at all knowledgeable in the
area. It is my hope that this will change as the year passes.
For January 2, the
mediation to reflect on is that knowledge is freedom. I found this to be
somewhat interesting because all our lives we are told that knowledge is power.
So, what is knowledge? Is it power? It is freedom? Is it both?
I spent a
little time (maybe an hour or so) with Google and searched for knowledge is
power vs knowledge is freedom. Most of the articles I found either went along
the lines of “knowledge is power” or “knowledge is power is freedom.” I also
found a “blook” by David Gurteen called Conversational
Leadership. Apparently a blook is a combination of book and blog; this
is the first time I have heard (or read in this case) the term.
The chapter I
read (found here) was about knowledge management and it argued that knowledge is
not power. The chapter contained a list of things you could do with knowledge.
I will not list them all here, but among them was “chose to ignore it” and “not
accept it as true.” Most of the items on the list had a common theme and that
theme was the ability to chose what to do with that knowledge. This is free
will. This is freedom.
Two other items
in the list were “not have the political skills to influence or persuade senior
management to take you seriously” and “not have the budget or other resources
to put the knowledge into action.” These limitations, while not power, are
still actionable.
Don’t have the
budget? Raise funds.
Don’t have the skills
to connect with your superiors or other groups you need to influence? Learn
them (more knowledge!). Become effective.
Having
knowledge does not grant power; it grants you the freedom to make informed decisions
or take action based on that knowledge. Knowledge is freedom. Knowledge is
freedom that can lead to power.