On Friday, June 21, 2019 at 2:06:14 PM UTC+1, Edward K. Ream wrote:
>
> Mind in Motion: How Action Shapes Thought
> By Barbara Tversky, Basic Books, 2019
>
> I'm telling everyone I know about this book. I highly recommend it.
>
> The author is a research scientist. The book is anything but dry. It
> might change your life.
>
> *Quotes*
>
> A creature didn't think in order to move; it just moved, and by moving it
> discovered the world and then formed the contents of its thoughts—Larissa
> MacFarquhar.
>
> Art proves that life is not enough—Paraphrasing Fernando Pessoa.
>
> This book means to show how we think about space and how we use space to
> think...The premise is audacious: spacial thinking, rooted in perception of
> space and action in it, is the foundation of all thought. The foundation,
> not the entire edifice.
>
> *Laws of cognition*
>
> These are solidly grounded in research. Understand them, or suffer.
>
> First Law of Cognition: There are no benefits without costs.
>
> The root of all cognitive biases. We evolved to solve problems quickly,
> but not necessarily accurately.
>
> Sixth Law of Cognition: Spatial thinking is the foundation of abstract
> thought.
>
> Oh, how I wish I had understood this in school...
>
> *Implications for Leo*
>
> Creativity does not mean daydreaming! For me, it means finding juicy
> problems to solve.
>
> Tversky discusses* empathetic design:*
>
> "[Designers] study a community of users intensively to see what people
> actually do and what kind of new product or service might improve their
> lives...We compared two strategies, mind wandering and empathetic, for the
> standard divergent thinking task, finding new uses for familiar
> objects...The hands-down winner was the empathetic strategy...Only the
> empathetic strategy approach gave a productive way to search for new uses."
>
> This is highly relevant to me at present.
>
> Edward
>
Her surname caused me to look things up ... she was married to Amos
Tversky, who worked extensively with Daniel Kahneman (Author of eg.
'Thinking, Fast and Slow') on cognitive biases and prospect theory.
The book looks right up my street, thanks!
J^n
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