Join 📚 Christian Champ's Highlights
A batch of the best highlights from what Christian's read, .
Learning facts, playing by the existing rules of domains, may come so easily to a high-IQ person that he or she never has any incentive to question, doubt, and improve on existing knowledge. This is probably why Goethe, among others, said that naïveté is the most important attribute of genius.
Creativity
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Charles Darwin recognized the value of this when he wrote, “In the long history of humankind (and animalkind, too) those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed.
Improv Wisdom
Patricia Ryan Madson
My own success has been in observing objects in daily use which, it was always assumed, could not be improved. By lateral thinking the 'Edisonian approach'- it is possible to arrive, empirically, at an advance. Anyone can become an expert in anything in six months, whether it is hydrodynamics for boats or cyclonic systems for vacuum cleaners. After the idea, there is plenty of time to learn the technology.
My first cyclonic vacuum cleaner was built out of cereal packets and masking tape (like some grotesque Blue Peter spaceship), long before I understood how it worked. After that initial 'Eureka!' it was a long haul to the Dual Cyclone-so called because an outer cyclone rotating at 200 m.p.h. removes large debris and most of the dust, while an inner cyclone rotating at 924 m.p.h. creates huge gravitational force and drives the finest dust, even particles of cigarette smoke, out of the air.
Against the Odds
James Dyson
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