Category Archives: Ireland

Context is Destroyed – Rock of Cashel

I’ve been titling the last few posts in terms of how context can shift over time.  This is not intended as a great reveal of some new management method, it just came to me as a recurring theme during this … Continue reading

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Context is Lost – Newgrange

Reprinted from a recent guest stint at cognitive-edge.com Raise a glass, when you get a chance, to T.B. Naylor, who, one day in 1891, found himself or herself inside the center chamber of the passage tomb at Newgrange.  This was … Continue reading

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Context is Layered – Making Sense at Knowth/Cnogbha

Reposted from a recent guest stint over at cognitive-edge.com When you visit Knowth, you stand amidst “passage tombs,” most likely built over 6,000 years ago. Surrounded by massive kerbstones featuring neolithic carvings, these magnificent structures have survived civilizations and North … Continue reading

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