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Thinking Made Easy
Dr. Seuss created a funny
little story about Mrs. McCave. She had 23 sons and she named
them all Dave. Now when you ask, "Who Is Dave?" The question,
under normal circumstances, would lead to a normal answer. But
if you were to ask her, it would be baffling.
Similarly, if you ask "what
is thinking?" you tend to baffle your listener.
This is because there is no
singular way of thinking.
It has even been said that
you can make people do almost anything, except think.
While this is supposed to be
funny. It is also sad, in a way.
Because thinking is essential
to evolution. Both your own and that of humanity as a whole.
It is also ironic, because
all we appear to do all day is think.
Yet can this ceaseless stream
of thoughts really be classified as thinking? After all, it
seldom results in new ideas, new solutions, or a new way to
grow.
From this we can assume that
thinking is more than stream-of-consciousness thinking.
It is, in fact, a discipline.
Thinking is a strategic game.
Most people try to think through things without a strategy.
This results in a completely muddled thought process. And it
is this that makes thinking difficult, frustrating, and
something most people avoid.
However, once you introduce
strategy into your thinking, it actually becomes enjoyable,
the frustration disappears, and surprising and often
paradigm-shattering answers appear.
Here are the two most famous
ways of thinking.
The first is visual thinking.
This method was named Gedanken, which is the German word for
thought. But really, the translation is more a thought
experiment. In other words, imagine a scenario which examines
a question.
Einstein was a champion at
this way of thinking, although he did not invent it. By
imagining riding on a beam of light, he got rid of the idea of
an ether and created the Special Theory of Relativity.
Similarly, Nikola Tesla said
that he could run a machine in his mind to see if it worked
properly.
This method is powerful
because it occurs at the alpha or theta level of
consciousness.
Alpha waves (8 - 12 Hz) are
seen when we are both alert and relaxed. These waves decrease
with physical activity. Theta Waves are 4 - 8 Hz . We see
these brain waves when we are falling asleep or just waking up
and during the early stages of sleep.
Another method was that of
Socrates, who would ask questions, get an answer, and turn
that answer into a new question. In other words, he would
create a chain reaction, and be able to probe deep into moral
and philosophical concepts. This method revolutionized the
soldier-farmer culture of Athens to become one of the most
brilliant cultures per population number in the history of the
world.
This thinking, I believe,
functioned at the gamma level (26-80 Hz), the brain waves
associated with higher level thinking, problem solving, and
interpretive consciousness.
Incidentally, the reason why
stream-of-consciousness thinking does not result in much
originality, is because it is usually at beta waves, (12-26
Hz) which is a high stress or anxious type of thinking and
because it is unsystematic. Basically, your thoughts run
around in loops.
Ironically, one of the
reasons for a decline in thinking, is modern education, with
it's emphasis on knowledge gathering, rather than interpretive
thought. It is the result of an industrial age mentality,
large numbers of people are taught the same thing similar to a
factory that makes a large number of the same products. By
stripping away individuality, it also does away with
originality.
In education, today, with the
emphasis on didactic teaching, thinking, in the sense of
original and creative discovery, does not happen much.
Usually, a teacher talks and a student listens and follows a
reading assignment. The only feedback required of the student
is to repeat back the ideas at some future time, and usually
under conditions of a lot of fear and tension.
Because of the relative
passivity of the student using this method, little is
reflected upon and what has been memorized also soon fades
away.
Besides the visual thinking
method of artists and scientists and the questioning method of
philosophers, another strategy of thinking has emerged, which,
for want of a better name, we will call creative thinking.
There are numerous methods of
creative thinking, from brainstorming to lateral thinking to
mind-mapping.
Here is one method that might
prove helpful to you. This method is particularly good for
completely baffling practical problems, in particular business
or personal problems.
1. Write down everything
about a difficult problem that bothers you. Blow off steam.
2. Write down all possible
solutions. Do this until you feel you have exhausted every
possible answer. The answers do not have to be original, just
any answer. Also, don't repeat an answer.
3. Do something completely
unrelated.
4. Out of the blue, you will
suddenly know the best answers from step 2 or you may even
come up with something new.
The reason this method works
is because it causes a break in neuronal habituation.
Initially, in step one, you exhaust all aspects of your stuck
state. Then in step two, you exhaust all known or possible
answers. In step three, you let your subconscious mind do all
the work. Finally, in step four, it gives you an answer.
The reason thinking is
important is that it helps you to transcend levels of
difficulties and evolve as a human being much faster. If the
thinking is original enough, it can even evolve a whole
culture or humanity as a whole.
Saleem Rana would love to share his inspiring ideas with
you. Hunting everywhere for a life worth living? Discover the
life of your dreams. His book Never Ever Give Up tells you
how. It is offered at no cost as a way to help YOU succeed.
http://www.theempoweredsoul.com/enter.html
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