The Four Lensesof Innovation

If we could distill from our study of the Renaissance a key principle of creativity and innovation, it would be this: The breakthrough discoveries of that period were made not because people were simply connecting and conversing with a rich network of contemporaries from different fields, but because they were looking at the world from some refreshingly new and very particular angles of view.

The philosophical and cultural movement we now call the Renaissance entirely transformed people’s thinking patterns, giving them a whole new set of lenses through which to view themselves and everything around them. These lenses enabled them to see existing concepts, common situations, and natural phenomena in completely new ways, and to spot opportunities for radical change and improvement that their predecessors had overlooked. It was this fundamental shift in mental perspectives that unleashed the unprecedented wave of creativity, curiosity, and inventiveness that came bursting out of that era. After all, people who happened to be born in Europe in, say, the fifteenth century were physiologically no different or more creative than people who were born a thousand years earlier. The only difference was in the attitudes, opportunities, and cultural influences of their day.

alt As we have learned so far, there were fourparticular perspectives or patterns of thinking ...

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