Kreye, Andrian (2007). «We Will Overcome Agnotology (The Cultural Production Of Ignorance)». The Edge World Question Center 2007. Edge Foundation. p. 6. Archivado desde el original el 18 de agosto de 2007. Consultado el 12 de agosto de 2007. «This is about a society's choice between listening to science and falling prey to what Stanford science historian Robert N. Proctor calls agnotology (the cultural production of ignorance)».
Arenson, Karen W. (22 de agosto de 2006). «What Organizations Don't Want to Know Can Hurt». New York Times. «'there is a lot more protectiveness than there used to be,' said Dr. Proctor, who is shaping a new field, the study of ignorance, which he calls agnotology. 'It is often safer not to know.'».
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Palmer, Barbara (4 de octubre de 2005). «Conference to explore the social construction of ignorance». Stanford News Service. Archivado desde el original el 24 de julio de 2007. Consultado el 12 de agosto de 2007. «Proctor uses the term "agnotology" – a word coined from agnosis, meaning "not knowing" – to describe a new approach to looking at knowledge through the study of ignorance.»
Palmer, Barbara (4 de octubre de 2005). «Conference to explore the social construction of ignorance». Stanford News Service. Archivado desde el original el 24 de julio de 2007. Consultado el 12 de agosto de 2007. «Proctor uses the term "agnotology" – a word coined from agnosis, meaning "not knowing" – to describe a new approach to looking at knowledge through the study of ignorance.»
Kreye, Andrian (2007). «We Will Overcome Agnotology (The Cultural Production Of Ignorance)». The Edge World Question Center 2007. Edge Foundation. p. 6. Archivado desde el original el 18 de agosto de 2007. Consultado el 12 de agosto de 2007. «This is about a society's choice between listening to science and falling prey to what Stanford science historian Robert N. Proctor calls agnotology (the cultural production of ignorance)».