Saturday 18 February 2017

Cory Galbraith: "Lessons in Creativity and Innovation from the Mad Scientist Named Tesla"

I was captivated by a February 12, 2017, LinkedIn post with the title above, written by Cory Galbraith, Webcast Canada's CEO, which so resonated with me that I felt I had to cull and re-post  it on this blog too - and thereby share it with the many brilliant  young Ghanaians who often read my  blog's posted  culled articles

I  do hope they will enjoy reading it as much as I did - and learn a thing or two from it that will encourage them to dare to be different.

Unfortunately, ours is an illiberal society that frowns on nonconformist individuals and those who refuse to follow fashion and crowds - yet those are the very characteristics that often define many of those whose game-changing ideas and inventions have so dramatically transformed our world, raising living standards for billions of people across the globe, and improving their quality of life in the process.

Little wonder then that there is such a dearth of original thinkers and inventors in our homeland Ghana - a nation that unfortunately frowns on the questioning of accepted cultural norms, and, in which rote-learning discourages curious minds that can envision possible new ways of solving societal challenges: if freed to explore their reimagined worlds. Pity.

Please read on:

''Lessons in Creativity and Innovation from the Mad Scientist Named Tesla

He went bankrupt, worked as a ditch digger, suffered a nervous breakdown - and in later years, became insane, claiming he was in contact with aliens from other worlds.

Nikola Tesla, one of history's most mysterious and misunderstood figures, had an incredible imagination which invented alternating current, used to power homes and offices throughout the world.

Tesla was part genius, part lunatic. This largely forgotten inventor is brought back to life here to teach the secrets of creativity, innovation and the means to shape the future.

    “Be alone, that is the secret of invention; be alone, that is when ideas are born.”

Some of our best ideas come, not in meetings or through committee, but rather, in solitude. In today's world of noise and distraction, quiet reflection is to be cherished - producing powerful day dreaming, moments of "what if?" and free thought without limits. Tesla preferred to work alone and allowed his mind to wander. Remote control technology, wireless communication and robotics came from the mind of Tesla. Reserve "alone" time this week and experience great ideas coming to the fore.

    “What we now want is closer contact and better understanding between individuals and communities all over the earth, and the elimination of egoism and pride which is always prone to plunge the world into primeval barbarism and strife. Peace can only come as a natural consequence of universal enlightenment.”

Tesla freed his mind of ego, pride and pettiness. He worked for and competed with Thomas Edison (whose birthday was this weekend) and went head to head with Marconi, but fought losing battles because competition was not his forte. Instead, he preferred to focus on ideas, invention and the future, and he wanted others to do the same, believing it would lead to a more peaceful, better world. It's a concept we should all embrace.

    “I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success.”

While Tesla did have a laboratory, he seldom made drawings of his ideas. Instead, he would build blueprints in his head through the power of visualization. Today, many psychologists advocate visualization to help us achieve our goals and improve our well- being. World class athletes use their minds to push their bodies. Musicians hear music before they write it. It is said that Tesla could judge the dimensions of an object to a hundredth of an inch. Tell your mind to make mental rehearsals. To practice, picture physical objects and their shapes in your mind’s eye, as Tesla did. Then, envision success. Research shows that playing things out in our head will provide familiarity, and better results, when done in real life.

Not all of Tesla's ideas made sense or turned into fruition.

In 1912, Tesla came up with the idea that "dull" students could become intelligent if their classroom was shocked with electricity. Later, he worked on an invention called "the thought camera" (designed to take pictures of the mind's thoughts), then on plans for what he called "the world's first flying saucer."

This rare and remarkable photo was taken in 1894 in Tesla's laboratory. The man in the center is none other than famous author Mark Twain. In the photo, Twain - who was friends with Tesla - is seen demonstrating the use of the human body as a conductor of electricity. Tesla is the figure in the background looking on.

Nikola Tesla was an eccentric loner who never married, living in New York hotels and spending his spare time feeding pigeons, one of which he claimed he had fallen in love with.

He walked up to 10 miles a day, ending each day by curling his toes 100 times (per foot), saying it stimulated his brain cells. Tesla claimed to have slept no more than 2 hours a night.

Despite these oddities, he made it to the cover of Time Magazine in 1931 with the caption "All the world's his power house".

Nikola Tesla, this strange man born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Croatia), and made an American naturalized citizen, is responsible for powering the planet.

Today - Tesla's legacy of imagination, invention and the power of the mind - brings hope to us all.

While Tesla did make a lot of money from his hundreds of patents, many sold to Westinghouse - he died in 1943 at age 86 in a hotel room, virtually penniless. Rather than saving or investing his money, Tesla poured all of it into his inventions, many of which went nowhere. He is admired today by many people who can relate to his hard work but lack of recognition. As a sign of respect and appreciation, the original founders of Elon Musk's Tesla Motors named the company after him."

End of culled LinkedIn post written  by Cory Galbraith, Webcast Canada's CEO.

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