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'Innovation In a Flash' Is a Myth

An anonymous reader writes "A New York Times article spells out what most of us probably already knew: real innovation takes lots of time and hard work to come to fruition. The article looks at the origins of new ideas, and attempts to dispel the myth that 'Eureka' moments create change. Comments author Scott Berkun, 'To focus on the magic moments is to miss the point. The goal isn't the magic moment: it's the end result of a useful innovation. Everything results from accretion. I didn't invent the English language. I have to use a language that someone else created in order to talk to you. So the process by which something is created is always incremental. It always involves using stuff that other people have made.'"

5 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Oh, really? by Max+Threshold · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Which major IP holder sponsored the "research" behind the article?

  2. Eureka Moments Do Happen... by rbowles · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its just that most often, they come at the tail end of alot of hard work. Everything comes together in a flash, seemingly in one brilliant moment. Those moments are what many of us live for, but in truth, they really aren't the result of our brains exceeding physical and computational limits and suddenly operating at infinite clock-speed. The truth is you were probably working on the problem for some time (possibly unconsciously). Give yourself a little credit for having an efficient background scheduler.

    --
    /* MAGIC THEATRE
    ENTRANCE NOT FOR EVERYBODY
    MADMEN ONLY */
    1. Re:Eureka Moments Do Happen... by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sometimes the answer reveals itself in a dream rather than a consious flash, Bohr's atomic model being a famous example.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  3. Re:You can't discard the role of intuition. by blahplusplus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Intuition is pattern recognition and changing the lenses (angle) from which you look at something, that someone took the time to work out.

    The key is, as Schopenhauer said: "to think something no one has thought yet, while looking at something that everybody see's" which is fancy way of saying: Keep changing the perspective (interpretive framework) and using other seemingly unrelated subjects to try and interpret it in terms of something else.

    Millions of people have similar or the exact same leads on great ideas everyday but they don't have the time or the fast mind to follow up on them. IMHO it's not that people can't figure it out given enough time, it is who and what you come into contact with that triggers the lead up to deofuscate the idea and THEN the persistence to follow that 'intuition'. Intuition is necessary but intuition

    Part of the problem is the education system itself amd it's attempt to rush learning and disavow thinking about things differently in order to pound out 'educated' workers. People that realize there are connections between everything that we can't see and have initiative despite lack of formal education were some of the greatest innovators.

  4. inspiration and perspiration by johnrpenner · · Score: 5, Interesting


    "Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration."
    (Thomas Alva Edison)

    "If Edison had a needle to find in a haystack, he would proceed at once
    with the diligence of the bee to examine straw after straw until he found
    the object of his search. I was a sorry witness of such doings, knowing that
    a little theory and calculation would have saved him ninety per cent of his labour."
    (Nikola Tesla, New York Times, October 19, 1931)