Is it possible for a person to have extraordinary ideas relative to themselves?
No, it’s impossible, absolutely impossible!
No, it’s impossible, absolutely impossible!
The birth of a new idea is merely a recombination of existing knowledge, a product of habitual thinking.
It is an extremely continuous process, where one can only move from point A to point B, reaching only the adjacent nodes, without the ability to leap from point B to point C. This is not something that the human cognitive model can achieve.
From Galileo’s observation of the swinging chandelier in a church and the discovery of the isochronism principle, to the invention of the pendulum, and the leaning tower of Pisa experiment, every new idea is an extremely continuous process. Every new idea, relative to the knowledge and ideas already possessed, does not have any remarkable uniqueness or significant difference.
Great ideas and inventions do not emerge simply because the hardware is configured well; they slowly grow in a certain direction. They are not extraordinary to the host themselves; they are merely products of habitual thinking.
Extraordinary ideas are only relative to others; they do not exist for oneself.
You cannot discover more about a river without stepping into it.
Only when you choose to enter a river can you gain more understanding, generate more information, make more discoveries, and potentially have extraordinary ideas relative to those who have not stepped into that river.
Extraordinary ideas do not exist within yourself; only the inertia of knowledge and thinking exists. Also, do not attempt to force yourself to have extraordinary ideas; it is not possible.