Discoveries in science and technology are thought by "untaught minds" to come in blinding flasher or as the result of dramatic accidents. Sir Alexander Fleming did not, as legend would have it, look at the mold on a piece of cheese and get the idea for penicillin there and then. He experimented with antibacterial substances for nine years before he made his discovery. Inventions and
innovations almost always come out of
laborious trial and error. Innovation is like soccer; even the best players miss the goal and have their shots blocked much more frequently than they score.
They point is that the players who score most are the ones who take the most shots at the goal - and so it goes with
innovation in any field of activity. The prime difference between innovators and others is one of approach. Everybody gets ideas, but innovators work consciously on
theirs, and they follow them through until they prove
practicable or otherwise, What ordinary people see as fanciful abstractions, professional innovators see as solid possibilities.
"Creative thinking may mean simply the realization that there's no particular virtue in doing things the way they have always been done," wrote Rudolph Flesch, a language authority. This accounts for our reaction so
seemingly simple
innovations like plastic
garbage bags and suitcases on wheels that make life more convenient: "How come nobody thought of that before?"
The
creative approach begins with the
proposition that nothing is as it appears. Innovators will not accept that there is only one way to do anything. Faced with getting from A to B, the average person will
automatically set out on the best-know and
apparently simplest route. The innovator will search for
alternate courses, which may prove easier in the long run and are bound to be more interesting and challenging even if they lead to dead ends.
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