The Spontis or Sponti movement was a left-wing movement in West Germany in 1970s-1980s. The name is an abbreviation for the word "spontaneous", in reference to their preference of "revolutionary spontaneity of the masses" over theoretically- and party-based movements. A significant force of this movement were university students.Sebastian Kasper
Some Sponti sayings, such as "Wissen ist Macht, nichts wissen, macht auch nichts"Gerhard Minnameier, "Wissen und Können im Kontext inferentiellen Denkens", In: Verwertbarkeit. Ein Qualitätskriterium (erziehungs-)wissenschaftlichen Wissens?, 2015, , p. 183 ("Knowledge is Power, (but) knowing nothing does not matter anyway") survived for many years after Sponti times, sometimes acquiring different meanings. Ulrike Rechel says that it "probably belongs to the top 5 of all slogans on toilet walls in universities or schools". She further comments that not knowing something seems to be not critical today, in the time of Google and Wikipedia, and smartphones, when any piece of knowledge is a couple of keyboard clicks away, in contrast to the times of Francis Bacon, when gaining knowledge was associated with much effort. But this attitude eventually leads to various social problems.Ulrike Rechel, "MACHEN WISSENSLÜCKEN UNS IMMER DÜMMER?" ("Do knowledge gaps always make us dumber?") (See also Wissen ist Macht in Germany.)
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