Creative, intuitive (gut feelings) entrepreneurial processes and approaches
Submitted by procreative-admin on Mon, 01/08/2011 - 12:43pm
An interesting article by a doctor who doesn't believe the brain is the seat of consciousness (which is correct).
There is no conceivable neural account of many aspects of human consciousness. A record of neural impulses cannot explain the simultaneous unity and multiplicity of the moment.
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Nor can neural activity explain memory, as the material of the brain has no way of representing the tenses of time; indeed as Einstein emphasised, for physicists, the past, present and future are stubborn illusions.
Submitted by procreative-admin on Sat, 02/10/2010 - 5:27am
Another article citing research about the different ways we think: basically, we direct our awareness towards 'context' or 'detail' or in a deeper sense, towards the feminine-wave (collective-possibilities, at-once, connections), and masculine-particle (detail, actuality, logic, serial analysis) dimensions to life.
Submitted by procreative-admin on Thu, 20/05/2010 - 9:45pm
As reported by Harvard Business Review (Blog) reviewing IBM's 2010 IBM Global CEO Study :
"Some key points from the study:
Submitted by procreative-admin on Mon, 03/05/2010 - 12:49am
From Science Daily, scientists have found that biological system utilise quantum potentials to derive beneficial plant growth.
This and other recent discoveries have captured the attention of researchers for several reasons," says Scholes. "First, it means that quantum mechanical probability laws can prevail over the classical laws of kinetics in this complex biological system, even at normal temperatures. The energy can thereby flow efficiently by -- counter intuitively -- traversing several alternative paths through the antenna proteins simultaneously.
Submitted by procreative-admin on Sun, 02/05/2010 - 11:04pm
Extract from 'Be and Become' revealing how the great inventors and scientists go about being creative.
Francis Crick "It’s well documented that the best way to have ideas is first of all to immerse yourself in a subject for longish periods—like months or more—in which you study intensely, and then step away and do something else—go for a holiday, go out dancing, or something like that. Very often ideas come in this sort of incubation period"
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Victor Frankl, well known psychotherapist and survivor of Nazi concentration camps observed: