"It has been proven you have lost at least 95% of the creativity
you once had. Want it back ?" |
Leonardo DaVinci - Curious
Welcome again to the
Sly As a Fox video newsletter. I’ve been working real hard lately
on a couple of brand new, exciting courses. One of them is called, “da
Vinci’s Seven Secrets,” after the creative genius, Leonardo
da Vinci, and what I wanted to do today in today’s newsletter is
cover just a glimpse into one of those secrets.
Many people believe Leonardo da Vinci was so creative because he lived
by seven principles, or seven secrets. And it’s the first one—remaining
curious in your business or personal life—that’s one of the
crucial ones.
OK, what is this thing? Now, every one of us has seen this before in school,
and we were taught how it works. It’s called a solar radiometer,
and what it does is measure the strength of the solar radiation—the
stronger the sun shines on it, the faster the paddles turn. So were you
ever curious about how it works? Well, your teachers taught you how it
works, but did you ever question that?
Well, the solar radiometer’s been around for about 130 years. It
was invented by William Crookes, and it works very well. Now, I said your
teachers taught you how it worked before. They used some version of radiation
pressure or gas pressure or out gassing of the black material or maybe
photoelectric effect, or convection currents or edge effects or the black
side of the paddle heats up and the white side doesn’t. But here’s
the amazing thing—after 130 years, every one of those explanations
is wrong. And the truth is—nobody knows how it works. That’s
right—nobody knows how it works. So why do we so often just take
at face value what our teachers teach us? I’ve built a chart right
here for every one of these supposed explanations. There’s a couple
of little brown bullets that explain why that can’t possibly be
true. So again, to be creative, it’s things like this you’ve
got to continually question and remain curious.
Here’s a thought-provoking question to really keep your mind sharp
and curious. Has time travel been proven? Not is it possible, but has
it been proven? And your first reaction is probably, “Absolutely
not,” but it has been, multiple times. They did an experiment where
they ran two cesium clocks that were calibrated side by side, one on the
ground and one in an aircraft that flew back and forth across the United
States, and when they compared the two clocks, the one on the plane ran
slower, exactly as Einstein had predicted. The same thing happens in particle
accelerators.
All the time, you know exactly how fast a particle’s going to decay,
but when you fly that particle in front of an observer near the speed
of light, it takes much, much longer for it to decay. And believe it or
not, the Global Positioning System, our GPS satellites, since they’re
all moving at different speeds relative to the person or the GPS handheld
that you have that’s showing you where you’re at, those clocks
have to be updated continuously for them to be accurate. If they didn’t,
the GPS system wouldn’t work.
The point is, I want you to just remain curious and question common knowledge,
because it can really open the doors to creativity. Here’s a book
I really like called The Hidden Messages in Water. If you haven’t
read this before, go get a copy. It’s really interesting in that
this guy, the author, took water and he played nice music to it, and kind
of ugly music to it; he spoke softly to it, then yelled at it—and
then froze ice crystals and then looked at them under a microscope, and
you can see that when the water was treated nicely, it made nice, symmetrical
water crystals. When it was treated poorly, it made ugly water crystals.
Now, as he says in the book, if we can do that to water by just the way
we treat it, and we’re 90% or something water ourselves, just imagine
what being hateful to each other’s doing to us.
Bill: Wait a minute—hold the phone.
Chuck: Oh, you’re gonna cure cancer?
Bill: Tuna fish—what if you mix mayonnaise right in the can with
the tuna fish? Hold it! Hold it! Wait a minute—Chuck—take
live tuna fish and feed them mayonnaise! Oh, this is good—call Starkist.
So why’d it take a hundred years for somebody to change it? I mean,
tuna, forever, only came in this form, fit, and function of a can, and
for a long time all you could get was plain tuna, not albacore or packed
in oil or packed in water. And it’s not that the technology didn’t
exist—the technology to package it differently existed for many
years.
Just look at all the choices you have in a grocery store now with tuna,
all the different packaging types, containers, different flavors—and
nothing was stopping anyone from doing that, it’s just somebody
was curious enough to ask the question, “Why not?”
I really despise that saying, “Curiosity killed the cat.”
That’s not the issue. Conventional wisdom is what kills curiosity.
I wanted to let you guys know also I’ve just started offering some
free webinars once a month off of my Web site where we’ll cove this
kind of material and a lot more.
Just go to my Web site, slyasafox.com, and you’ll see on the home
page there a link to register for the webinar. Now the first one I’m
gonna have is going to be August 16th, but you’re going to have
to hurry and register because I can only take 25 people.
Thanks again for joining me on the Sly As a Fox video newsletter. Take
care.
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