“This book is the first of its kind by defining wisdom as information and the highest level of the cognition units set, composed of data, information, concept, knowledge and wisdom,” says Targowski. “I consider wisdom the most important civilization resource, and it should be monitored in a way that is similar or even better than the way we monitor the use of energy, the development of population or other resources.”
Targowski has founded his theory of wisdom on multiple assumptions, including: wise decisions need not be expert in nature; wisdom is not synonymous with intelligence; wisdom has a range of bandwidth and properties; knowledge on what constitutes wisdom is not the same as the process of becoming a wise person; and many more.
Author of 27 books on information technology, civilization, philosophy and political science, this is Targowski’s third book on the interdisciplinary theory of wisdom and is available from NOVA Publishers, New York.