You On AI Encyclopedia · Collective Tacit Knowledge The You On AI Encyclopedia Home
Txt Low Med High
CONCEPT

Collective Tacit Knowledge

The third and most consequential species in Collins's taxonomy: knowledge that resides not in any individual but in the ongoing social practices of a community — and that is therefore structurally unavailable to any system trained on the community's textual output alone.
Collective tacit knowledge is the species Collins identifies as genuinely impenetrable to artificial intelligence. It is not tacit because it could not be articulated if someone tried (that is relational tacit knowledge). It is not tacit because it lives in the body (that is somatic tacit knowledge). It is tacit because it exists only in the ongoing social interactions of a community — in the norms, standards, implicit agreements, and evolving sense of what matters that constitute what it means to be a competent member of a practice. No individual possesses it in its entirety. No document captures it. It is reproduced only through the community's continuing social life, and it dissolves when that life ends.
Collective Tacit Knowledge
Collective Tacit Knowledge

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

Collins arrived at this concept through his long immersion in the gravitational wave physics community, where he observed that the knowledge required to operate a detector could not be fully transmitted through publications or even through technical training. It was transmitted through apprenticeship — through the specific social relationship in which an experienced physicist conveyed, often without being able to articulate, the community's shared sense of what counted as a real signal, what anomalies could be safely ignored, and what standards the community actually held itself to as opposed to what it claimed in its methodological statements.

The concept has direct consequences for AI evaluation. When a large language model is trained on the textual output of a community of practice, it absorbs the community's explicit knowledge in its entirety. What it cannot absorb — because it was never written down — is the collective tacit knowledge through which the explicit knowledge was produced and is maintained. The model has the text. It does not have the social life from which the text emerged and in which its meaning is sustained.

Tacit Knowledge
Tacit Knowledge

In Collins and Thorne's 2026 paper, the authors test this directly. They examined how gravitational wave physicists decided to ignore a specific fringe science paper — a decision that required the community's collective tacit knowledge about credibility, plausibility, and the implicit standards of what counts as a paper worth engaging. The physicists could reproduce the reasoning. The language model could not. It produced plausible-sounding arguments, but the arguments lacked the specific social grounding that gave the physicists' judgment its authority.

The relationship to the apprenticeship problem is direct. Collective tacit knowledge is transmitted through the social processes of apprenticeship — the slow, friction-rich relationship in which newcomers absorb community norms by participating in community practice. When the practices that sustain the community change faster than the collective tacit knowledge can adapt, or when the apprenticeship structures are bypassed by tools that produce competent-looking output without requiring participation, the knowledge thins. It does not disappear immediately. It fails to transmit to the next generation.

Origin

Collins developed the three-species taxonomy most systematically in Tacit and Explicit Knowledge (2010), building on Michael Polanyi's foundational insight that 'we know more than we can tell.' The key move was to subject Polanyi's concept to sociological analysis — to distinguish knowledge that is tacit for contingent reasons (relational), knowledge that is tacit because the body has its own intelligence (somatic), and knowledge that is tacit because it exists only in social practice (collective). The third species was the one Collins identified as most consequential for the AI question.

Key Ideas

Irreducibly social. Collective tacit knowledge is not stored in any individual mind or any document. It exists only in the ongoing practices of the community that maintains it.

Relational Tacit Knowledge
Relational Tacit Knowledge

Transmitted through participation, not instruction. The knowledge passes from experienced to inexperienced practitioners through the social relationship of apprenticeship, not through explicit teaching.

Unavailable to systems trained on text. Training data captures the community's explicit output, not the social practices through which that output was produced.

Lost when practices dissolve. When the community that sustains the knowledge dissolves or is bypassed, the knowledge does not persist in archives. It disappears.

In The You On AI Book

This concept surfaces across 2 chapters of You On AI. Each passage below links back into the book at the exact page.
Chapter 1 The Winter Something Changed Page 4 · What Is Seniority Worth?
…anchored on "Depth itself was losing its market value"
These people were not worried about being replaced. They were worried about something subtler and harder to articulate, and it took me weeks of listening to different versions of the same fear before I could name it: Depth itself was…
Awe and loss at the same time.
Depth itself was losing its market value.
Read this passage in the book →
Chapter 10 The Aesthetics of the Smooth Page 2 · The Productive Failures
…anchored on "the specific depth that can only be built through struggle"
Claude skips the deposition. The surface looks the same. The knowledge has been transferred, not earned. The friction that would have built the understanding has been smoothed away, and with it, the specific depth that can only be built…
The struggle was the understanding. The friction was the learning.
Claude skips the deposition. The surface looks the same. The knowledge has been transferred, not earned.
Read this passage in the book →

Further Reading

  1. Harry Collins, Tacit and Explicit Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2010)
  2. Harry Collins, Gravity's Shadow: The Search for Gravitational Waves (University of Chicago Press, 2004)
  3. Michael Polanyi, The Tacit Dimension (1966)
  4. Harry Collins, 'The structure of knowledge' (Social Research, 1993)

Three Positions on Collective Tacit Knowledge

From Chapter 15 — how the Boulder, the Believer, and the Beaver each read this concept
Boulder · Refusal
Han's diagnosis
The Boulder sees in Collective Tacit Knowledge evidence of the pathology — that refusal, not adaptation, is the correct posture. The garden, the analog life, the smartphone that is not bought.
Believer · Flow
Riding the current
The Believer sees Collective Tacit Knowledge as the river's direction — lean in. Trust that the technium, as Kevin Kelly argues, wants what life wants. Resistance is fear, not wisdom.
Beaver · Stewardship
Building dams
The Beaver sees Collective Tacit Knowledge as an opportunity for construction. Neither refuse nor surrender — build the institutional, attentional, and craft governors that shape the river around the things worth preserving.

Read Chapter 15 in the book →

Explore more
Browse the full You On AI Encyclopedia — over 8,500 entries
← Home 0%
CONCEPT Book →