Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Walt Disney, Nikola Tesla, and even Mozart all ascribed their creative genius to their ability to visualize.
Einstein said that all of his most important and productive thinking was done by “combinatory play” with “images” in his mind. Einstein used images, visual patterns and associations to discover more about the world around him.
Einstein believed that the spirit of learning and creative thought were lost in strict rote learning. Instead, he turned to his own imagination and visualization.
Visualization is an incredibly powerful tool in solving problems. Often times much more powerful that simply using words or numbers.
Visual thinking is done in the right side of the brain, presenting new problem solving and big-picture thinking.
God didn’t give us formal instruction manuals for our brain. Therefore, we must explore the power of thought on our own.
1. The first step is to expand your consciousness as well as your perspectives.
The genius mind will look at a problem from many different perspectives. We are literally able to place ourselves completely in someone else’s shoes in order to experience a new way of looking at things. By doing this, we expand our knowledge and consciousness of the perspectives around them.
Look at problems from a variety of different perspectives. Most people only rely on their own perspective, and therefore always have a very narrow view of the world.
Leonardo da Vinci believed that, to gain knowledge about the form of a problem, you must begin by learning how to restructure it in many different ways. He believed that the first way you look at a problem is entirely too biased. You are only seeing the problem from one perspective: yours.
You can find new solutions to the problem by looking at it from a variety of different perspectives. According to Einstein, “You cannot solve a problem with the same type of
thinking that is creating it.”
Einstein insisted that the secret of his genius was his ability to look at problems in a childlike, imaginative way.
Monday, May 5, 2008
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