Where Good Ideas Come From: The Seven Patterns of Innovation 

Written by Venkadesh Narayanan | Jun 19, 2020 3:29:05 PM

A slow hunch can be much more valuable than a Eureka moment.The connected 'hive mind' is smarter than the lone thinker.Where you think matters just as much as what you're thinking.The best ideas come from building on the ideas and inventions of others

From the Renaissance to satellites, medical breakthroughs to social media, Charles Darwin to Marconi, Steven Johnson shows how, by recognising where and how patterns of creativity occur, we can all discover the secrets of inspiration.

Steven Johnson is the author of the acclaimed books Everything Bad is Good for You, Mind Wide Open, Emergence and Interface Culture. His writing appeared in the Guardian, the New Yorker, Nation and Harper's, as well as the op-ed pages of The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. He is a Distinguished Writer In Residence at NYU's School Of Journalism, and a Contributing Editor to Wired.

Where Good Ideas Come From: The Seven Patterns of Innovation | Steven Johnson | Penguin UK

         

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The adjacent possible

Chapter 2: Liquid networks

Chapter 3: The slow hunch

Chapter 4: Serendipity

Chapter 5: Error

Chapter 6: Exaptation

Chapter 7: Platforms

Chapter 8: The fourth quadrant

 

LINK FOR THE BOOK

https://www.amazon.in/gp/product/0141033401?ie=UTF8