
Lovely book about moving forward and the people who help us through. I sadly cannot remember much about the first book because I read it amidst a sea of other books.
Lovely book about moving forward and the people who help us through. I sadly cannot remember much about the first book because I read it amidst a sea of other books.
“In Praise Of Mess: Why Disorder May Be Good For Us” is Hidden Brain’s latest episode. I’m very far behind on my podcasts but I’m glad I caught this episode. In it, Shanker interviews Tim Harford about the subject of his latest book is entitled “Messy: How to be creative and resilient in a tidy-minded world”.
And here are my take-aways:
Creative solutions can emerge from unexpected, undesirable provocations. Tim gave a few examples of this:
Very often we don’t have any reason to look for a better solution than the one we’re familiar with. Random shocks force us to improve on the current solution or seek out completely new ones.
Shanker points out, rightly so, that had he been faced with a broken piano he would not be able to re-create anything similar to The Köln concert because he lacks any musical training. And indeed having practiced skill and preparation allows us to benefit from random shocks.
Besides Keith Jarrett, the famous “I have a dream…” speech from Martin Luther King Jr. was also improvised but not without prior preparation. King had written his speech before hand which he recited to the people. But starting from that famous line “I have a dream…” King had gone off-script and spoke from the heart. And that’s the part that we remember to this day.
Photo by lundgrenphotography