Thinking in Different Ways (2)

Thinking in Different Ways (2) Another way of thinking that may not be very helpful in a world full of ‘problems’ to solve is “Earth-around-the-Sun” thinking Earth around the Sun ThinkingThis type of thinking is more ‘logical’ and has wider applicability than ‘Crowing Cockerel Thinking’ or ‘Flat world Thinking’ mentioned in the last blog but [...]

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Thinking in Different Ways (2)

Another way of thinking that may not be very helpful in a world full of ‘problems’ to solve is “Earth-around-the-Sun” thinking

Earth around the Sun ThinkingThis type of thinking is more ‘logical’ and has wider applicability than ‘Crowing Cockerel Thinking’ or ‘Flat world Thinking’ mentioned in the last blog but can be as dangerous and misleading as these first two ways of thinking. This way of thinking transfixes our assumptions about reality and about how ‘the world works‘ (so an alternative name might be ‘transfixed thinking’). This is also a thinking level that is ‘in the box’.So if you believe that the Earth orbits around the sun (as a complete and perfect manifestation of reality) then there is a danger that you see the sun as the centre of the universe (so you have simply moved from the theory of the earth as the centre, to the sun as the centre). With this way of thinking you may never get to consider how the sun (together with the earth) moves in relation to other systems and how those other systems may affect you.Seeing your model as ‘true’ may mean you ignore subtle effects that come from things outside of your model – like in the solar system analogy – the movement of other solar systems (larger elements but further away) or other elements (smaller but nearer) like our moon. And we know from chaos theory that a collection of subtle effects (a butterfly flapping its wings in Australia) can interact to give big effects.Side-tracking to Global Warming for a moment

The mention of ‘butterflies’ and chaos theory side-tracks me for a moment to Global Warming as an example where scientists are seen to be applying “Earth around the Sun Thinking”.

Despite the fact that both the moon (orbit changes in relationship to Earth) and the Sun (sunspot activity variation) are known to influence weather on planet Earth, I have yet to see a single computer projection that includes all such known relevant data in the calculations. This means that I personally can’t be led to believe any of the data projections on Global Warming. If you are thinking outside of existing accepted models of current reality, then it is logical to make absolutely sure that important weather factors like lunar orbit shifts and sunspot activity have been included in the computer modeling for these are (known) major contributors of both historical and current world temperature changes. Why should we believe any statistics or data that is so reductionist in its approach? (Incidentally I believe we should save our oil, gas and coal reserves for future needs and therefore we must  seek alternative sources of energy – this is just plain sensible – and we should have been thinking about this a hundred years ago before Global Warming was a figment of anybody’s imagination.)

It is possible to identify a lot of bad decisions being made by Governments, Business, Economists, Financiers etc. around the world because they believe either in useless models or a flawed understanding of the limitations of the dataBack to the Thinking about Thinking

Earth-around-the-Sun Thinking is the ultimate ‘we know the truth’ thinking.It is the thinking that says ‘we have the complete picture’, ‘we are the experts’ and ‘we don’t need to listen to any new or alternative perspectives’. This stance becomes ‘my theory is true’ and then no counter-evidence can possibly be allowed to invalidate it.

The attitude that emanates from this way of thinking is the “If you try to convince me that there is something incomplete or wrong here, I will ignore all your evidence, and I will strongly defend my current belief”. We all  defend our beliefs this is natural. The dangers arise when the beliefs we defend are very limited and very closed and we are simply not open to other possibilites.Earth-around-the-Sun Thinking is accepted and very prevalent in society today. This logical thinking level is a limited thinking level however, for whilst it is useful in the context of a single and important relationship (note: a reductionist relationship), it can be misleading in relation to the whole picture and may be missing many key influencing factors when it comes to applying the thinking for accurate predictions.In an era where our political leaders in particular seek and worship the results of expert assessments or computer predictions, we need to stay alert when the thinking that the ‘experts’ used to construct the formulas has failed to include important potential factors – making each and every prediction seriously flawed (Swine flu comes to mind here, I wonder why?).We have all heard about rubbish-in, rubbish-out, but how often are our most eminent leaders making predictions that will influence our well-being or waste our money from models that are flawed, or data that is of poor quality.Science and maths, and history – the list goes on, these are all littered with examples where important data (evidence) was left out when it did not fit the thinking (model). The reason ‘chaos theory’ was a late development in maths (so I have heard) was that for a long time it was known that certain mathematical data did not fit the existing theories, but this data was continually and deliberately overlooked. You see when people (the explorers) on the flat-plain of current thinking, travel out to its far reaches and say “I have seen beyond and this world isn’t flat”, all the Flat-World Thinkers gang up, or ‘group-think’, together and find arguments to ignore the data as an aberration. In fact they see the explorer as the aberration not the data.So Earth-around-the-Sun Thinking is only a slightly more sophisticated form of Flat World Thinking. For most, the former is the true way to think and the latter way is a false way. It may appear therefore that Earth-around-the-Sun Thinking is far superior to Flat World Thinking. However the Gods looking down on us from on high, see both levels of thinking as identical and flawed, as both models (can) obscure reality and both ways of thinking place restriction on the future potential of human beings and limit the possibility for creative thought and for new solutions.

“All models are wrong, some models are useful” George Box

To be creative is to be able to hold different possible models of reality at any one time and see the usefulness of them all.

‘Creatives’ observe and play with their models, they don’t live in their models nor believe them to be ‘true’.

We are all born creative beings. One of the things that sabotages this birthright is an education system where the focus is on right answers rather than useful answers. The way we currently do education therefore is to condition-out our ability to hold multiple ‘truths’ in our head at any one time. This is something to discuss elsewhere, however our education system is another example of the outcome from Earth-around-the-Sun Thinking applied thoughtlessly transfixing us to believe that education is about ‘dumping information in’ to heads and believing that we measure cleverness by how well students can get that dumped information back out again. (this is recall not learning). If this is cleverness we would never have seen the Fosbury Flop, the Photocopier, Michael Jackson’s Moon Walk, Einstein’s Theory of Relativity or indeed this blog.

Learning Point: Very few things are absolute or true, most things are actually only ‘true’ relative to other things. Two plus two does not always equal exactly four, parallel lines can meet, carbon dioxide is not the only thing to influence our weather!

SummaryFrom a Creativity perspective, the three levels of thinking outlined so far are illogical and unhelpful (and yet they arguably represent the way that most of us think). Next we’ll look at three levels of thinking that are absolutely required if we are to create new solutions to existing problems.

Coming Next:Ways of thinking that our human brain was actually wired to do?

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Thinking in Different Ways

Thinking in Different Ways In the last Blog I looked at how our models, theories, beliefs and assumptions can be either helpful or harmful. Also I looked at how our assumptions influence our thinking and vice-versa. In this blog, I am going to focus on thinking. There are many different ways to look at thinking [...]

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Thinking in Different Ways

In the last Blog I looked at how our models, theories, beliefs and assumptions can be either helpful or harmful. Also I looked at how our assumptions influence our thinking and vice-versa.

In this blog, I am going to focus on thinking.

There are many different ways to look at thinking (because there are many different ways we can model thinking). The first model I am going to share in the next three blogs is one I put together just a few days ago (so one of my own creations – thought I accept there is little new under the sun). I am going to call this model the “Logical Levels” of thinking (not to be confused with NLP Logical Levels) and I use this term because I see the ways of thinking I am about to describe as being on a continuum from quite illogical (though sometimes understandable) through to very sensible, and very logical.

I have given these logical levels of thinking my own names but if anyone can come up with any ones please let me know. My logical levels of thinking are: (1) Crowing Cockerel (2) Flat World (3) Earth around the Sun (4) Out from my Existing World (5) Multiple Perspectives and (6) Meta-Thinking and I will briefly describe the first two here.

Crowing Cockerel Thinking

This is the level of thinking that is followed when people believe that the sun rises every morning because the cock crows. The proponents of this way of thinking will defend it as absolutely correct. There can be no argument with this way of thinking because the sun rises after the cock crows. In the 21st Century, you would think that we are far too clever to believe or to use this way of thinking, but you will regularly discover in this column (and the sister column – the Non-Political Party) that “Crowing Cockerel Theories” are all around us and they have the effect of protecting the status quo. This thinking stops us from looking at things in new ways, is superstitious, and it stops us from improving. Even intellectuals and academics are not immune from this type of thinking. Scientists also have their fair share of this thinking.

Why does such an illogical form of thinking persist?

One reason may be that we rarely give time to think about our thinking. So we do Crowing Cockerel Thinking thoughtlessly and without any constructive engagement with it.  Another reason is that we believe for every effect we see there is a cause. So we seek causes but often have no way of knowing (insufficient data?) what is a cause and what is a co-incident. Indeed in this specific example it is the sun that ’causes’ the cockerel to crow not the other way around (even this of course is far too simplistic).

And before you say that you never think in this way, I intends to have great fun showing otherwise. Maybe you do think-about-your-thinking and so you are partially immunised from this false idol. But I will bet that you probably (without realising it) take advice occasionally from an expert who (unknowingly) practises this form of thinking.

So let’s try to identify this perverse thinking mode whenever and wherever it appears in the media. And do please send me any examples you find.

Flat World Thinking

This form of thinking has some definite logic to it. It is represented by a theory that is true (useful) but only under very limited conditions. Imagine living thousands of years ago in the middle of a vast plain. This thinking was adequate. The theory says “my world is a flat place”. The model will always be true (useful) within certain confined limits. However to extrapolate from this (specific place) model into a general model of thinking would be dangerous (particularly if you were gambling with your life or your worldly possessions, or gambling with the lives of future generations on the assumption that the model was true). As I intend to show time and time again, Flat-World thinking is (unfortunately) alive and well. If you have your personal examples of this Flat-World Thinking please send them to me so I can add them to my collection.

Coming Next:

Earth around the Sun Thinking

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