Synectics: the development of creative capacityHarper, 1961 - 180 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 22
Pagina 74
... effort in the past experience of the client . If we made up our own problems and then went ahead to solve them , it ... efforts . This kind of checking permits the client to make judgments about the value of Synectics from time to time ...
... effort in the past experience of the client . If we made up our own problems and then went ahead to solve them , it ... efforts . This kind of checking permits the client to make judgments about the value of Synectics from time to time ...
Pagina 83
... effort . At first the group experiments tentatively with selection . Members are on the look out for people using the mechanisms naturally . In fact the client Synectics group works through all the processes by which they themselves ...
... effort . At first the group experiments tentatively with selection . Members are on the look out for people using the mechanisms naturally . In fact the client Synectics group works through all the processes by which they themselves ...
Pagina 130
... effort to explain is really an effort to settle to package an observation of — something irrelevant , so that we can be secure by hiding the rich ambiguous SYNECTICS 130.
... effort to explain is really an effort to settle to package an observation of — something irrelevant , so that we can be secure by hiding the rich ambiguous SYNECTICS 130.
Sommario
THE OPERATIONAL MECHANISMS | 33 |
SYNECTICS IN THE INDUSTRIAL MODEL | 57 |
THE COMMONPLACE AND EXPERTISE | 92 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
Aesthetic Albert Einstein apparently irrelevant artist attempt Autonomy of Object basic breakthrough Cambridge candidate chromatophores client commonplace concept concrete conscious creative activity creative process described developed Direct Analogy entropy Euclidean geometry Euclidean system example experience familiar strange Fantasy Analogy feeling function G. P. Putnam's Sons group members Harvard University Hedonic Response Henry human imagination implied Indian rope trick individual industrial insight interview intuition invention inventor involved jacking mechanism kind language lichens logical London look Louie Macmillan mean metaphor mind observed operational mechanisms paint Personal Analogy phase Philosophical play potential practice problem as understood problem-solving problem-stating Psychoanalysis psychological reduction to practice result roof Science scientific selection sessions solution spring success Symbolic Analogy Synectics group Synectics operation Synectics research Synectics theory Synectors tapes technical technique things tion University Press viewpoint William words York