See ‘How Great Ideas Happen’ Review: Building a Brainstorm by Belinda Lanksof The WSJ. She reviewed the book How Great Ideas Happen: The Hidden Steps Behind Breakthrough Success by George Newman. Excerpts:
"what we call inspiration is better understood as a set of habits and mental practices available to anyone willing to cultivate them. Creativity, in his telling, is more method than miracle."
"The first myth Mr. Newman challenges is the romantic notion that isolation breeds originality."
"As important, Mr. Newman argues, is what happens once those ideas surface: submitting them to the scrutiny of others, whose feedback often sharpens what solitary effort cannot."
"many innovations grow out of existing ones, often by borrowing or transplanting concepts from one field to another."
"the greatest breakthroughs contained only 5% to 10% novel material. What looks like brilliance, in other words, often turns out to be a strategic mix of the old with a touch of the new."
"First comes deciding where to look, a stage he calls surveying. Next comes gridding the search, imposing structure and defining the project’s parameters. Only then does the familiar work of idea generation begin"
"The final step . . . is . . . refining what has been unearthed."
"people dramatically underestimate how productive continued searching will be. In experiments involving brainstorming, participants predicted that their best ideas would come early and that additional effort would yield diminishing returns. In fact, the opposite was true"
"it’s less clear whether a poet searching for a metaphor or a composer developing a motif works by gridding constraints and digging methodically."
" sheer volume matters more than initial quality. Producing hundreds of ideas, after all, boosts the odds of finding a few good ones. But Mr. Newman insists that humans are still essential to the process"
This reminds me of a chapter on innovation from one of the text books I used called The Economics of Macro Issues by Roger LeRoy Miller and Daniel K. Benjamin. Here is something they said about innovation:
An example was
