Lateral Thinking: Creativity Step by Step
$18

There's there's a this you mentioning that the peer group or virtual or real board of directors with Divergent thought process has made me think of a book that really helped me a long time ago. I've been meaning to revisit it but it's actually a combination of two books and I don't know how well these would Age if I were to pick them up now for where I am, but I would honestly like 15 or 20 years ago found them. Very very helpful Edward de Bono is the author there's one book. I want to say it's lateral thinking the other was something along the lines of the the six thinking hats and the the conceit are the premise behind the lat. Is that you create a virtual table of advisers who represent different person a different extreme perspective, right? So you might have a pessimist you might have the innovator you might have the fill in the blank and there are a set of questions and priorities that each of those have so you run your situation through the lens of each of those thinking hats and I found that tremendously valuable for yes as you put it getting out of flat land.

“This could be a very useful book for teachers and non-teachers alike. Dr. DeBono does not claim to be able to turn us all into Miltons, Davincis, and Einsteins…but his techniques provide an alternative to just sitting around waiting for the Muse to appear. The Muse never appears to most of us—hence the value of this book.”— David Cohen, Times Educational Supplement

The first practical explanation of how creativity works, this results-oriented bestseller trains listeners to move beyond a “vertical” mode of thought to tap the potential of lateral thinking

“The underlying argument of the book is that there are two kinds of thinking—vertical and lateral. Most of us are educated to think vertically, to go from one logical step to the next, moving all the time towards the one correct solution of our problem. We are not usually educated to be creative, to generate idea after idea….

“Dr. DeBono argues that the function of vertical, logical thinking is to argue what is wrong. It is a very useful way of thinking, but it is not the only useful way. To claim it is, is the sort of intellectual arrogance that makes creative thinking unlikely….

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