The highly admired scientist Linus Pauling, a double Nobel laureate in
chemistry and peace, was once asked by a student. 'Dr Pauling, how do
you have so many good ideas?' Pauling thought for a moment and
replied: 'Well, David, I have a lot of ideas and throw away the bad
ones.' Where do ideas come from? Why do some people have many more of
them than others? How do you distinguish the good ideas from the bad?
Most intriguing of all, perhaps, why do the best ideas sometimes
strike in a flash of 'sudden genius'? These questions are the subject
of this book. Andrew Robinson explores the exceptional creativity in
both scientists and artists by following the trail that led ten
individuals from childhood to the achievement of a famous creative
breakthrough as an adult, in archaeology, architecture, art, biology,
chemistry, cinema, music, literature, photography, and physics. Broken
into three parts, the book begins with the scientific study of
creativity, covering talent, genius, intelligence, memory, dreams, the
unconscious, savant syndrome, synaesthesia, and mental illness. The
second part tells the stories of five breakthroughs by scientists and
five by artists, ranging from Curie's discovery of radium and
Einstein's theory of special relativity to Mozart's composing of The
Marriage of Figaro and Virginia Woolf's writing of Mrs Dalloway.
Robinson concludes by considering what highly creative people who
achieve breakthroughs have in common; whether breakthroughs in science
and art follow patterns; and whether they always involve imaginative
leaps and even 'genius'.
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The Gradual Path to Creative Breakthroughs
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191624926
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter