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Thursday, November 12, 2015

Tearing apart the Thinking Traps



 The course of the world was revolutionized and shaped by many great inventors and

astounding discoverers. They have called upon their flair with commendable courage in times

of problems and have solved it by thinking smartly. For instance, the man who

invented the printing press did not bring it out just out of nothing. He has constantly worked on

the root of the problems to yield the essential fruits.

Harnessing the Resources
: During his times, there were carved wooden plates to do printing,

but they were highly laborious and time consuming as it requires a lot of carving and a great

pressure required to lay the paper against the inked wooden plate to create a good impression.

But, the great Gutenberg overcame these two problems which is placing the plates quickly and

then printing it more effectively. He solved the whole jigsaw puzzle with creative thinking and

with a burning desire to solve the issue. He harnessed the then present stamps and seals to

create efficient plates by developing chunks of metal with letters on it. And, regarding the

pressure issue he thought it simply out of the box!

Lucked out: He happened to go to a wedding and there he saw the wine press which gave him

the principles of quick pressure printing and he ultimately stumbled upon the idea of a modern

printing press, in the words of David Perkins, he lucked out! Though the wine press was a

sudden and chance encounter but his thoughts were always groping for such a high yielding

chance. It is the same with Newton, Darwin, Archimedes and many other such great people

who revolutionized the world with their thoughts and then thoroughly converted those

thoughts into desired actions and results.

Synchronizing Thoughts for Accelerated Actions: It just didn’t happen out of nothing,

Gutenberg and other great people like him have already had their thoughts and wills

synchronized for such a discovery or creative invention and that highly increased the chance of

encountering events which accelerated their thoughts into powerful actions. He also had the

breakthrough thinking by having sought through questions like: How could we generate good

pressure to print a page in a single moment? And, for Newton he asked the question, why does

an apple fall? Such curious questions are the threshold of changing the world for better.

Resistors of Reasoning: David Perkins explains wonderfully about what is resisting such

sequential reasoning and how to increase our chances of luck out to beat out the odds of the

common world. Perkins also talks about the gold rush in Klondike, Alaska. He greatly compares

its character with the resemblance of breakthrough problems. He discusses about the

difficulties of finding the gold as it does not leave any merciful tracks of where it is hiding. He

briefly and elegantly explains about the four challenges that are to be encountered while going

through breakthrough thinking.

The Logics of Luck – The Four Challenges: There is a wilderness of possibilities for finding gold

as there are a lot of places to be searched before one could have a glorious breakthrough. There

must be perseverance and persistence in such occasions. He calls it the “wilderness trap”.

Hence, there are many ways but few that provide the desired results.  Secondly, he talks about

the clueless plateau which implies that there are no signs showing where the gold is available.

Otherwise it is also called as the plateau trap where the lonely prospector is looking for a

mother lode of gold trapped in a plateau of low gold concentration without any direction

indicators for the huge sands of gold. This clearly resembles that in breakthrough problem

there is no mercy of apparent clues which lead to the solution.

Canyon of Nowhere: Now, the third challenge he discusses is about the narrow canyon of

exploration. The gold could even be present at a completely different place from where the

prospector is actually searching with so much trouble and pain. And, this poor prospector who

is heavily preoccupied with today’s pits or way of thinking can never realize the tremendous

possibilities available elsewhere. It is almost like journeying on a track which takes to another

city, being the irony that the desired destination could as well be on the side parallel track! He

terms this trouble as “the Canyon Trap”. The problem solver could be searching for solutions

without any clue that is completely unavailable within the realm of his search.

Oasis of Vacuum: Finally, the fourth challenge he talks is about the tempting and little

promising signs of gold which makes the prospector to be preoccupied with the little nuggets of

gold, whereas the mother lode of gold is just a few steps away. He calls this as the Oasis of false

promise or in other words the Oasis Trap. In the similar fashion a problem solver could be

attracted to the little oasis in the middle of their journey and mistaken them to be the final

destination and end up being stuck in that rut.

Example for Exploring Problems
: So, the four traps are the wilderness trap, plateau trap,

Canyon trap and the Oasis trap. And, now he comes up with the best ways to tear these traps in

order to achieve the celestial glory of solving the problem. He gives a simple example of the

nine dots for exploring such breakthrough problems. It is all about drawing four straight lines

which pass through all the nine dots without lifting pencil from paper. Most of times we happen

ending up connecting all the dots except one and the way it can be solved is by drawing a line

just a little outside one dot. It perfectly resembles all the four thinking traps where we try

drawing different conclusions as we generally tend to think inside the box instead of taking a

little leap into the out of the world senses. It is all about extending your edges to explore and

annihilate the problem with a creative thinking. It just proves that near solutions are not real solutions!

Fuel for Breakthrough Thinking Vehicle: In order to have a breakthrough one must have a

consistent inquiring spirit combined with careful experience. David Perkins provides with four

solutions for the four traps. And, he terms them as Roving, Detecting, Reframing and Decentering.

Cognitive Snaps - Roving: It is all about exploring and having a constant flow of mind to crack

the possibilities in the wilderness trap. It is about trying everything you can lay your hands

upon. Just like the Thomas Edison’s 10,000 experiments leading to the light of the world, the

bulb. It is the intense spirit of extensive cruising and far range flying to catch the hunt in the

wilderness.  Such extensive search across all the symmetries shall compress the space of

possibilities and lead to the desired destination. It is all about not lingering long in just one

place but exploring actively in many different places. It is also vital to avoid any duplication of

earlier efforts and squeezing the actual area of possibilities.

Detecting:  It is all about being able to detect several hidden clues in a plateau of apparently no

clues. It is all about diligently searching for such clues which point a direction. A good and

creative thinker will detect the rules and find what doesn’t imply in the rule or what is absent in

the conditions of a problem and then use it to bring out the effective presence of the required result.

Reframing: Now consider the method of reframing after a mountain of fruitless work. It is not

about trying old things over and over but trying things in a new way of thought can heighten

the chances of crossing the dead sea of problem and achieving the immortality of success! One

must ask themselves what kind of constraints are being taken for granted and what must be

done to come out of that spoiling frame and seek out the absolute freedom for the fruits of

success. It is always good to challenge the existing assumptions to bring alive the extinct

features of solving a problem.

Decentering: A partial solution or a temporary solution can beguile and mask the actual

solution from the eyes of the problem solver and thus dissolving any further persistence

required to crack the problem. It is required from the part of the problem solver to leave the

oasis of pleasure and take the extra pain to take a new approach or an opposite path to acquire

the breakthrough. It is all about refreshing your approach and idea of fresh possibilities.

All of these operations or solutions can work as a team to bring about the best and desired

results. Each of these procedures complements and completes the solution for a breakthrough

problem. If a breakthrough problem is a jigsaw puzzle then your mind’s innovative way of

approach is the missing part!



                                 Synchronizing Our Thoughts For Site Dancing


Our collaboration group went for a site dancing which is a form of dance where a particular site

itself becomes the stage for dancing. It’s a form of dance which mainly focuses on making

people aware of the historic and aesthetic values of  the particular site where the dance is

performed. We as a group had our own traps and webs to overcome.

Roving and Reframing our Site dance: The first one being a myriad of possibilities for finding a

right site to perform our site dancing. We were all arguing about different sites to perform our

dance. And, we were in a wilderness of thoughts as everyone wants their voice to be heard.

Finally, we reached to a point where we were are all stuck in a clueless plateau. We definitely

wanted a breakthrough decision regarding this issue and finally we formed as groups and wrote

our choices on a piece of paper and this was after roving about our indifferences and the

different places available. We have decided to reframe the issue by detecting and diligently

searching all the places where we can perform a site dance.

Dissolving our Indifferences: We all of us then agreed on three possible places where we could

perform our site dance and wrote them on three pieces of paper and rolled them. One of us

cherry picked a roll of paper and finally we came up on a place where there was a big tree to

perform our dance. And, this was agreed by all of us because the chosen place was a simple

chance of luck through the breakthrough idea of rolling our choices on a piece of paper.

We did not rely on partial solutions where only a few were satisfied and the rest of them

weren’t nor did we depend on temporary solution but came up with a simple solution by

involving luck into our issue and decentered by taking a new approach to solve our issue. This

has dissoved all our indifferences regarding the location of the site and we performed a sizzling site dance!

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