Mental power tool.The Power of Immposible Thinking: Transform the Business of Your Life and The Life of Your Business By Yoram Wind and Colin Crook (with Robert Gunther Robert Theodore Gunther (23 August 1869 – 9 March 1940) was a historian of science and founder of the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford. Gunther's father, Albert Günther, was keeper of Zoology at the British Museum in London. ) Wharton School Publishing Wharton School Publishing (known colloquially as WSP) is a publishing house, a division of Wharton School and Pearson Education. The imprint brings together a variety of business educators and corporate executives on a list that features works in many formats, including print, ($24.95) [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] "The ways we make sense of our world are determined to a large extent by our internal mind and to a lesser extent by the external world," write Wind and Crook (with Gunther) in The Power of Impossible Thinking. Wind is a professor of marketing at The Wharton School and Crook is a senior fellow at the school, so it's not like these two are some sort of post-New Age gurus. The point they try to make is that people tend to depend on mental models, which are useful to get along on a day-to-day basis (e.g., consider how little you "think" about driving when you're making your daily commute TO COMMUTE. To substitute one punishment in the place of another. For example, if a man be sentenced to be hung, the executive may, in some states, commute his punishment to that of imprisonment. ), but which can be stultifying when it comes to coming up with fresh ideas: "Our models shape what we see, and this opens or limits our possibilities for action." So they argue that if we are going to be creative, inventive in·ven·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characterized by invention. 2. Adept or skillful at inventing; creative. in·ven or otherwise free thinking, it is necessary to create new models, new patterns of thinking. Working with a metaphor from Stephen Covey's The Seven Habits of Highly Successful People, they explain, "Sometimes we don't need to merely 'sharpen' the saw; we need to throw it out and pick up a power tool." Sharpen sharp·en tr. & intr.v. sharp·ened, sharp·en·ing, sharp·ens To make or become sharp or sharper. sharp all you want: you may not cut it in today's environment, where the creative win and the rest ebb away Verb 1. ebb away - flow back or recede; "the tides ebbed at noon" ebb, ebb down, ebb off, ebb out fall back - move back and away from; "The enemy fell back" . The authors provide examples of people who have done a good job at transformation and provide insights as to how one can apply this to their own life. Or you could continue to do what you've always done and then wonder why your condition doesn't seem to improve.--GSV |
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