Imatge de l'autor
30 obres 196 Membres 6 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Obres de Luc de Brabandere

Plaisir des idees (1994) 5 exemplars
Le sens des idées (2004) 3 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Nom normalitzat
Branbandere, Luc De
Nom oficial
Branbandere, Luc De
Nacionalitat
Belgique

Membres

Ressenyes

Ciel donc, ce petit bouquin d’apparence anodine ne serait-il pas justement l’exemple de ce qu’il dénonce ?

Après une première partie plutôt rigoureuse dans laquelle l’auteur liste différentes embrouilles et sophismes suivie d’outils permettant de les détecter, voilà qu’il s’en prend à l’Internet.

Mais là, hélas, la même rigueur n’est plus de mise et les prémisses ne sont plus aussi clairement établies, les faits semblent se mélanger aux opinions pour philosopher sans trop se tracasser de sourcer ou de citer… (més)
 
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noid.ch | Apr 26, 2022 |
In 2000, I was in grad school at Texas A&M and got an email from the XO of the Navy ROTC unit we were administratively attached to: "Your boss is in town tonight...might want to think about going." The "boss" he was referring to was Rear Admiral Lou Smith, Commander of Naval Facilities Engineering Command and Chief of the Civil Engineer Corps (CEC), who was talking that night at the local Society of American Military Engineers. So, my two CEC cohorts also in grad school and I uniformed up and went. I'd been on the receiving end of many of RADM Smith's talks. He was a dynamic, engaging, funny Navy leader, and I'd heard most of what he was saying recently, so the brain was wandering trying to solve some Navier-Stokes thing when I heard him say, "...Thinking outside the box. I hate that phrase!" I sat up, thinking, "I like that phrase...why don't you like it?" Of course he read my mind, and continued, "Let me tell you why I hate it... I'm in DC sitting at a table with a bunch of admirals, and they're whining about not having enough funds and they don't know what to do to get more. I say, 'Let's go rob some banks!' For whatever reason some of them took me seriously and complained that we couldn't do that, to which I said, 'Why not? We have all the guns.' So you see," and he waggled a finger at the crowd, "there is a box!"

That stuck with me, obviously, and when I came across this book, I thought "Finally! Someone gets it!" Except...Messrs. de Brabandere and Iny kind of didn't. Oh, they thought they did, uh...the book?, obviously, but ...

A lot of time explaining our resistances to thinking in new boxes, from failure to categorize information correctly (the authors presume, of course, that there must be a "correct" way...) to so-called "Eureka" moments. They said
Eureka moments can entail product or process innovations, like Apple's invention of the iPhone or Toyota's postwar development of its formidable, industry-challenging "lean" manufacturing strategies.

Huh? They clearly do not understand "Eureka"... confusing it with "necessity" (Toyota - limited real estate for storing pseudo-infinite amounts of materials like the American manufacturers) and "how about this?" (Apple). Isaac Asimov said
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'

(In case some fan thinks I'm being picky, the authors' examples throughout this book are just as off.) Anyway, here is their "powerful" five-step approach to thinking in new boxes:
1. Doubt Everything
2. Probe the Possible
3. Diverge
4. Converge
5. Reevaluate Relentlessly

"Doubt Everything"??- WTH? Okay, the suggestion to question what you think you know makes great sense (and is nothing new). But to advocate doubting everything is plain absurd and a time waster - selectively doubt and question what needs it, but not everything. Worse than that, a primary example used to drive this home was Dick Fosbury's innovative high jump technique and the doubt that others had until he won gold. Interesting example, but flawed. Fosbury didn't doubt. Well, he did doubt that he could get any higher the traditional way. The authors say themselves in telling the story that Fosbury forced himself to experiment with different techniques. Its a stretch to confuse persistence with "doubting everything".

The rest are just rehashes of the obvious, done elsewhere better. But as is to be expected, they do have few white board fodder strewed throughout.

Here's the bottom line (my bottom line...not quite what the authors are trying to sell): there is always a box...change up how you try to move from the one you're in to another...and never rely on one set of "powerful" tools...there's a big universe out there...keep looking.

… (més)
 
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Razinha | Hi ha 4 ressenyes més | May 23, 2017 |
The basic concept of this book is to explain how to be creative. It describes a mechanistic way of generating new ways of looking at things and coming up with new ideas. It involves divergence and convergence and scenario building. It was interesting but repetitve.
½
 
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GlennBell | Hi ha 4 ressenyes més | Mar 2, 2015 |
When we start working on Innovative Projects we used to promote "Thinking out of the Box" Technic's !
However - changing Paradigm and creating new methodology and new boxes is really amazing !
BCG's comments are absolutely relevant - When people think in new boxes, they learn how to ask the right questions in order to open up the most promising doors to creativity, innovation, and opportunity.
This is basically what we forgot and therefore we missed the final target => Introduce new thinking paradigms and keep moving to the next available Boxes ...
Excellent book - no doubt ;()

Sunday, 5th Oct 2014
… (més)
 
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Fouad_Bendris | Hi ha 4 ressenyes més | Oct 5, 2014 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
30
Membres
196
Popularitat
#111,885
Valoració
½ 3.3
Ressenyes
6
ISBN
44
Llengües
5

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