Habits for creativity
There’s a given in this explanation: the individual’s will to think or have an opinion.
Wonder if there’s anything to say about that. Can’t have an opinion unless I <u>really</u> care
I will definitely address that at some point. Caring is a superpower. Caring is also its own kryptonite.
Related: what if you care but you "can't" do anything about your ideas? What do you do then?
Having a framework to guide how to act is definitely valuable. Wonder if it can scale: make caring contagious. We need more collective caring about “the right things”. Hopefully the same things too. Caring as the means to achieve group alignment.
I assume most people care but it’s easy to subtract caring and it’s hard to get it back.
Reminds me of Oblique Strategies by Brian Eno. Similar in concept, different area of application?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oblique_Strategies
I have those. Similar but this is my take.
It immediately reminds me the slips used by Robert Pirsig.
Example?
You’ll get the first one tomorrow. And then every Tuesday for almost a year. Let me know if your still confused after a few examples.
There’s a given in this explanation: the individual’s will to think or have an opinion.
Wonder if there’s anything to say about that. Can’t have an opinion unless I <u>really</u> care
I will definitely address that at some point. Caring is a superpower. Caring is also its own kryptonite.
Related: what if you care but you "can't" do anything about your ideas? What do you do then?
Having a framework to guide how to act is definitely valuable. Wonder if it can scale: make caring contagious. We need more collective caring about “the right things”. Hopefully the same things too. Caring as the means to achieve group alignment.
I assume most people care but it’s easy to subtract caring and it’s hard to get it back.
Reminds me of Oblique Strategies by Brian Eno. Similar in concept, different area of application?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oblique_Strategies
I have those. Similar but this is my take.
It immediately reminds me the slips used by Robert Pirsig.
Example?
You’ll get the first one tomorrow. And then every Tuesday for almost a year. Let me know if your still confused after a few examples.