002 创造的挑战

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Human beings have one foot in the familiar and one foot in the novel. And we're actually biologically built to be that way.

We don't want to run on autopilot, we don't want to live Groundhog Day doing the same thing, saying the same thing to the same people all the time. On the other hand, we don't want doors to have new types of way you unlock them and gravity is flipping upside down, and the English language all the letters are scrambled everytime you open the newspaper.

We need some mixture of the two. Some sweet spot between novelty and familiarity, and the search for that sweet spot is not something with a formula.

It's a constant experiment. And so in our own lives, we're constantly navigating between the things that are touchstones for us where we feel solidly grounded and the places where we're flying free and there isn't a net under us.

We often think that the most creative people are the ones who leap straight to the right answers and inspiration right from the getgo. But actually, when you look closely at it, inspiration is usually in the proliferation of a diversity of options.

And what Picasso is to art, Beethoven is to composing, and in that behind his works lie an enormous reservoir of sketches that Beethoven left. And what you see when you look at those sketches is trying out ideas after idea after idea, working the material, never erasing anything, constantly figuring out all sorts of options.

And then picking his favorite out of those. And so one thing that I'll tell my composition students is banish the eraser and have lots of paper.

Never make it that you're trading over like treating your other ideas like sandcastles that get washed away by the sea, but rather preserve everything so you have the maximum array of choices from which to pull your ultimate decisions. You try to come up with as many possible solutions as you possibly can.

And you constantly challenge yourself. It's not good enough to have one answer. It's not good enough to have three answers.

Let me come up with seven possible answers to this. The physicist Richard Feynman said that his whole success as a Nobel prize winning physicist was that he trained himself constantly to come up with different ways of arriving at the right answer.

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