“The most famous cognitive obstacle to innovation is functional fixedness — an idea first articulated in the 1930s by Karl Duncker — in which people tend to fixate on the common use of an object. For example, the people on the Titanic overlooked the possibility that the iceberg could have been their lifeboat.”
““This is what I think now,” Fitzgerald writes at the end of the third essay: “that the natural state of the sentient adult is a qualified unhappiness.” Yet his loyalty remains fastened to happiness, to youth—even if only the memory of its shimmer. “
The counterintuitive secret to getting things done is to make them more automatic, so they require less energy.
Jaron Lanier: Why Facebook Isn’t Free
Richard Tafel: 5 Steps for Systems Change
Jonathan Harris: Rethinking Social Networking
Battlestar Galactica Main Title – cover – The Doubleclicks
“But why have some countries ended up with good institutions, while others haven’t? The most important factor behind their emergence is the historical duration of centralized government. Until the rise of the world’s first states, beginning around 3400 BC, all human societies were bands or tribes or chiefdoms, without any of the complex economic institutions of governments. A long history of government doesn’t guarantee good institutions but at least permits them; a short history makes them very unlikely.”
leafcity
We cannot command nature except by obeying her. ~francis bacon
“A blogger who is not prepared to make a total fool out of himself is not a real blogger.”