|
Post by account_disabled on Feb 12, 2024 9:10:55 GMT
Innovators are often artists, and what artists do better than others is see the world through new eyes. They take an idea and then turn it on its head or look at it from the side. Sometimes the art is political commentary, sometimes it's a fascination with texture, but it's always an exploration by the artist. Most people don't have the time or inclination to engage in those self-reflective (sometimes futile) quests, but they can help the rest of us see the world from their perspective. Anyone who saw Andy Warhol staring at a Campbell's Soup can probably thought he was crazy. But when he transforms these cans from something you keep in your pantry to something you Botswana Email List hang on your wall, he recontextualizes them, and he forces us to see them differently. Cover of The Time Machine courtesy of Wikipedia Likewise, when writing The Time Machine, Wells showed readers that they had always taken the linear quality of time for granted. Ideas can breed change, refinement, and expansion in the innovator's world and often require amplifiers to spread those ideas to the public. Phase Two: Amplify and Explain Innovation Artists are not always the best communicators of their ideas, or sometimes they fail to see the true value of their ideas. "The Time Machine" is Wells's second work about time travel. His publisher, Heinemann, convinced him to explore the idea in a novel form, and they shared his work with the public. Welles needed Heinemann to expand his work. Another way in into the second stage of the idea life cycle is through interpretation.
|
|