FREE online courses on Introduction to Creative Thinking - Negative
Attitudes That Block Creativity - I can t do it - Or There is nothing I can do
Some people think, well maybe the problem can be solved by
some expert, but not by me because I'm not (a) smart enough, (b) an engineer, or
(c) a blank (whether educated, expert, etc.) Again, though, look at the history
of problem solving.
Who were the Wright brothers that they could invent an
airplane? Aviation engineers? No, they were bicycle mechanics. The ball point
pen was invented by a printer's proofreader, Ladislao Biro, not a mechanical
engineer. Major advances in submarine design were made by English clergyman G.
W. Garrett and by Irish schoolmaster John P. Holland. The cotton gin was
invented by that well known attorney and tutor, Eli Whitney. The fire
extinguisher was invented by a captain of militia, George Manby.
And so on. In fact, a major point made by recent writers
about corporate excellence is that innovations in industry almost always come
from individuals (not research groups) outside of the area of the invention.
General Motors invented Freon, the refrigeration chemical, and tetraethyl lead,
the gasoline additive. Kodachrome was invented by two musicians. The continuous
steel casting process was invented by a watchmaker (fooling around with brass
casting). Soap making chemists turned down the problem of inventing synthetic
detergents: those detergents were invented by dye making chemists.
In a nutshell, a good mind with a positive attitude and some
good problem solving skills will go far in solving any problem. Interest in and
commitment to the problem are the keys. Motivation--a willingness to expend the
effort--is more important than laboratory apparatus. And remember that you can
always do something. Even if you cannot totally eradicate the problem from the
face of the earth, you can always do something to make the situation better.