why thinking visually helps me get stuff done
his mindset provides a method and a framework for understanding, appreciating, and acting upon obstacles that life throws at you . This allows you to become “ antifragile ” in the sense that you actually gain st rength by going through and learning from challenging times. The greater the challenge , the greater your strength becomes. I learned a gr... See more
Unknown • Challenging * Mattering = Meaningful
Fashion Month—which kicks off with New York Fashion Week before moving on to London, Milan, and, as of this week, Paris—is a flurry of shows, events, dinners, and parties (assuming you’re lucky enough to attend). Unfortunately, it’s rarely as riveting for those following from afar. These days, “reviews are mainly fluff pieces,” as designer and styl... See more
Substack Reads • Fashion Month, unstacked
Firstly it is not only convergent. It is a series of divergent and convergent steps. During divergence we are creating choices and during convergence we are making choices. For people who are looking to have a good sense of the answer, or at least a previous example of one, before they start divergence is frustrating. It almost feels like you are g... See more
John Maeda • What does design thinking feel like?
The second difference is that design thinking relies on an interplay between analysis and synthesis, breaking problems apart and putting ideas together . Synthesis is hard because we are trying to put things together which are often in tension. Less expensive, higher quality for instance. This is where Roger Martin's idea of integrative thinking is... See more
John Maeda • What does design thinking feel like?
"Both divergent and convergent thinking are enhanced when levels of dopamine are elevated. Mood affects creativity immensely by influencing dopamine levels in the brain."
Divergence and Convergence: The Two Fundamental Stages of the Creative Process
fortelabs.com
In “Thinking in Pictures,” Grandin suggested that the world was divided between visual and verbal thinkers. “Visual Thinking” gently revises the idea, identifying a continuum of thought styles that’s roughly divisible into three sections. On one end are verbal thinkers, who often solve problems by talking about them in their heads or, more generall... See more
Joshua Rothman • How Should We Think About Our Different Styles of Thinking?
Ideas related to this collection