Skip to main content

Clay Burell's Library tagged creativity   View Popular

10 Jul 09

Ryan Grim: Read the Never-Before-Published Letter From LSD-Inventor Albert Hofmann to Apple CEO Steve Jobs

  • Doblin and Hofmann were close; Doblin gave the doctor his first tab of ecstasy in the '80s when it was still legal, he says, and Hofmann loved it, saying that finally he'd found a drug he could enjoy with his wife, no fan of LSD.
15 Dec 07

The ePortfolio Hijacked

  • Great model for e-portfolio management AND PHILOSOPHY.
    - cburell on 2007-12-15
24 Nov 07

You Can't Predict Who Will Change The World - Forbes.com

  • Great evidence that "memorization of facts" does not lead to success, but creativity does - even in business.
    - cburell on 2007-11-24
  • If the success rate of directed research is very low, though, it is true that the more we search, the more likely we are to find things "by accident," outside the original plan. Only a disproportionately minute number of discoveries traditionally came from directed academic research. What academia seems more masterful at is public relations and fundraising.

    This is good news--for some. Ignore what you were told by your college economics professor and consider the following puzzle. Whenever you hear a snotty European presenting his stereotypes about Americans, he will often describe them as "unintellectual," "uneducated," and "poor in math," because, unlike European schooling, American education is not based on equation drills and memorization.

    Yet the person making these statements will likely be addicted to his iPod, wearing a T-shirt and blue jeans, and using Microsoft Word to jot down his "cultural" statements on his Intel-based PC, with some Google searches on the Internet here and there interrupting his composition. If old enough, he might also be using Viagra.

    America's primary export, it appears, is trial-and-error, and the innovative knowledge attained in such a way. Trial-and-error has error in it; and most top-down traditional rational and academic environments do not like the fallibility of "error" and the embarrassment of not quite knowing where they're going. The U.S. fosters entrepreneurs and creators, not exam-takers, bureaucrats or, worse, deluded economists. So the perceived weakness of the American pupil in conventional studies is where his or her very strength may lie. The American system of trial and error produces doers: Black Swan-hunting, dream-chasing entrepreneurs, with a tolerance for a certain class of risk-taking and for making plenty of small errors on the road to success or knowledge. This environment also attracts aggressive tinkering foreigners like this author.

    Globalization allowed the U.S. to specialize in the creative aspect of things, the risk-taking production of concepts and ideas--that is, the scalable part of production, in which more income can be generated from the same fixed assets through innovation. By exporting jobs, the U.S. has outsourced the less scalable and more linear components of production, assigning them to the citizens of more mathematical and culturally rigid states, who are happy to be paid by the hour to work on other people's ideas.

23 Nov 07

TED Talks: A journey to the center of your mind

Phantom pain cured with a mirror, and more. Creative neuroscience.

www.ted.com/184 - Preview

TED video science psychology creativity

09 Oct 07

TED | Talks | Richard Baraniuk: Goodbye, textbooks; hello, open-source learning (video)

  • If you like "idea" TV, TED Talks is the TV channel for you. Presentations from the best minds in the world. Always inspiring and cutting-edge.
    - cburell on 2007-10-09
01 Oct 07

kis21learning wiki / Must-Have Accounts for Read-Write Web

    • On Diigo Toolbar, click dropdown triangle > SHOW ANNOTATIONS > GROUPS > 1:1 Laptop
    • See anything different?  Hover over it
    • click "actions" > "add comment,"  and win 1,000 WON by finishing the sentence first
    • If I could be any kind of artist or performer, my fantasy would be to become a __________________ (ex., writer, photographer, painter, filmmaker, musician, talk-show host, comedian, journalist, etc.). - on 2007-10-01
    Add Sticky Note
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page

Diigo is about better ways to research, share and collaborate on information. Learn more »

Join Diigo