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Formula for Invention Genius |
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An essential aspect of creativity is not being afraid to fail.Babies learn to walk and talk without formal instruction, using T + E = P. They babble until certain sounds elicit desired results. They stand up, fall down, over and over again until they walk. Throughout their pre-school days toddlers learn to climb, run, and manipulate toys and everyday objects by trial and error. As the progeny of Nature, children invent the way Nature invents and has invented, unfolding her creation over billions of years of trial and error. Then every once in a while, an inventor demonstrates astonishing ability at the game of trial and error. Nobel laureate
Richard Feynman, the legendary wild child of physics, was so facile at solving problems that his colleagues distilled his creative prowess to a formula:1. Write down the problem.But this tongue-in-cheek Feynman Formula neglects a key element of invention success—failure. Nature, the toddler, Feynman, and all creators fail. They fail so often that it's tempting to measure creative performance by the number of failures one has chalked up. In other words, if you're not failing, you're just not trying hard enough. Or in Feynman's own words, "In order to succeed I try to fail as fast as I can." Join a discussion of this post on The Hub. |
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