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The Genius of the Tinkerer copy 01


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[The secret to innovation is combining odds and ends, writes Steven Johnson.] In the year following the 2004 tsunami, the Indonesian city of Meulaboh received eight neonatal incubators from international relief organizations. Before life emerged on Earth, the planet was dominated by a handful of basic molecules: ammonia, methane, water, carbon dioxide, a smattering of amino acids and other simple organic compounds.

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[The secret to innovation is combining odds and ends, writes Steven Johnson.]

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In the year following the 2004 tsunami, the Indonesian city of Meulaboh received eight neonatal incubators from international relief organizations. Several years later, when an MIT fellow named Timothy Prestero visited the local hospital, all eight were out of order, the victim of power surges and tropical humidity, along with the hospital staff's inability to read the English repair manual.

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Mr. Prestero and the organization he cofounded, Design That Matters, had been working for several years on a more reliable, and less expensive, incubator for the developing world. In 2008, they introduced a prototype called the NeoNurture. It looked like a streamlined modern incubator, but its guts were automotive. Sealed-beam headlights supplied the crucial warmth; dashboard fans provided filtered air circulation; door chimes sounded alarms. You could power the device with an adapted cigarette lighter or a standard-issue motorcycle battery. Building the NeoNurture out of car parts was doubly efficient, because it tapped both the local supply of parts and the local knowledge of automobile repair. You didn't have to be a trained medical technician to fix the NeoNurture; you just needed to know how to replace a broken headlight.

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Sep 6
Student Ashlyn Matthews Student Ashlyn Matthews (Sep 06 2016 10:53PM) : How long did this take him to make?
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Sep 6
Student Ashlyn Matthews Student Ashlyn Matthews (Sep 06 2016 10:54PM) : How did he come up with the name of it?
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Sep 7
Mekenna Vaughan Mekenna Vaughan (Sep 07 2016 12:51AM) : I had to read this article twice to finally understand it well enough. But it is pretty crazy that all of that cane made out of recycled car parts and it was double efficient.
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Sep 7
Mekenna Vaughan Mekenna Vaughan (Sep 07 2016 12:56AM) : We need more creative in the world to step up and make a change. Creative people are the ones who make cures and who create machines to help people. my friends mom works for a company that helps artificial hearts work. Creative people make changes.
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Sep 7
Hannah Reardon Hannah Reardon (Sep 07 2016 11:15AM) : I totally agree with you. More creative people only means more changes.
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Sep 7
Natalie Parrott Natalie Parrott (Sep 07 2016 11:57AM) : I agree with you. Creative things can lead to changes.
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Sep 7
Hannah Reardon Hannah Reardon (Sep 07 2016 11:25AM) : After reading this article once again it really helped me understand that creative minds are truly what make this world what it is. All the different innovations and inventions wouldn't have been able to be made without creativeness.
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Sep 7
Natalie Parrott Natalie Parrott (Sep 07 2016 12:04PM) : I like the idea of how you can use recycled parts to fix things.
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Natalie Parrott Natalie Parrott (Sep 07 2016 12:09PM) : How many times did he have to try new ways?
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Danny Zeidan Danny Zeidan (Sep 04 2016 9:05PM) : This is the first time, in the article, he really hints about needing to have a more creative mind. We always think the solution is so much more complex, but really It's changing a headlight.
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Sep 6
Paige Hickam Paige Hickam (Sep 06 2016 2:16PM) : Agreeing, recreating, headlight more

I totally agree. Just because something is complex at first does not mean you have to make it more complex when trying to recreate it. It was simply taking scraps out of a garage and using a headlight to make heat.

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Student Ashlyn Matthews Student Ashlyn Matthews (Sep 06 2016 10:55PM) : I agree!! At first it was hard to understand what it was saying, but then I broke it down to be a headlight.

The NeoNurture incubator is a fitting metaphor for the way that good ideas usually come into the world. They are, inevitably, constrained by the parts and skills that surround them. We have a natural tendency to romanticize breakthrough innovations, imagining momentous ideas transcending their surroundings, a gifted mind somehow seeing over the detritus of old ideas and ossified tradition.

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Paige Hickam Paige Hickam (Sep 06 2016 2:19PM) : Creative Ideas can save lives. Something so little can change the life of so many people and I believe this is a great example of one!
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mia reeves mia reeves (Sep 06 2016 3:56PM) : Totally agree !!! More people need to realize this.
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Mekenna Vaughan Mekenna Vaughan (Sep 07 2016 1:00AM) : creative lives do save lives. more creative people need to be involved and help.
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Sep 12
Danny Zeidan Danny Zeidan (Sep 12 2016 1:29AM) : Yes, I saw that as well while reading! It would benefit all people to consider this when hiring for a job similar to Timothy's.
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mia reeves mia reeves (Sep 06 2016 3:51PM) : Very good point. Somethings come from out of the blue.
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But ideas are works of bricolage. They are, almost inevitably, networks of other ideas. We take the ideas we've inherited or stumbled across, and we jigger them together into some new shape. We like to think of our ideas as a $40,000 incubator, shipped direct from the factory, but in reality they've been cobbled together with spare parts that happened to be sitting in the garage.

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As a tribute to human ingenuity, the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould maintained an odd collection of sandals made from recycled automobile tires, purchased during his travels through the developing world. But he also saw them as a metaphor for the patterns of innovation in the biological world. Nature's innovations, too, rely on spare parts.

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Evolution advances by taking available resources and cobbling them together to create new uses. The evolutionary theorist Francois Jacob captured this in his concept of evolution as a "tinkerer," not an engineer; our bodies are also works of bricolage, old parts strung together to form something radically new. "The tires-to-sandals principle works at all scales and times," Mr. Gould wrote, "permitting odd and unpredictable initiatives at any moment -- to make nature as inventive as the cleverest person who ever pondered the potential of a junkyard in Nairobi."

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You can see this process at work in the primordial innovation of life itself. Before life emerged on Earth, the planet was dominated by a handful of basic molecules: ammonia, methane, water, carbon dioxide, a smattering of amino acids and other simple organic compounds. Each of these molecules was capable of a finite series of transformations and exchanges with other molecules in the primordial soup: methane and oxygen recombining to form formaldehyde and water, for instance.

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Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt (Sep 06 2016 4:40PM) : The planet was originally dominated by a handful of molecules. Those molecules formed others and the innovation process had an echo effect.

Think of all those initial molecules, and then imagine all the potential new combinations that they could form spontaneously, simply by colliding with each other (or perhaps prodded along by the extra energy of a propitious lightning strike). If you could play God and trigger all those combinations, you would end up with most of the building blocks of life: the proteins that form the boundaries of cells; sugar molecules crucial to the nucleic acids of our DNA. But you would not be able to trigger chemical reactions that would build a mosquito, or a sunflower, or a human brain. Formaldehyde is a first-order combination: You can create it directly from the molecules in the primordial soup. Creating a sunflower, however, relies on a whole series of subsequent innovations: chloroplasts to capture the sun's energy, vascular tissues to circulate resources through the plant, DNA molecules to pass on instructions to the next generation.

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The scientist Stuart Kauffman has a suggestive name for the set of all those first-order combinations: "the adjacent possible." The phrase captures both the limits and the creative potential of change and innovation. In the case of prebiotic chemistry, the adjacent possible defines all those molecular reactions that were directly achievable in the primordial soup. Sunflowers and mosquitoes and brains exist outside that circle of possibility. The adjacent possible is a kind of shadow future, hovering on the edges of the present state of things, a map of all the ways in which the present can reinvent itself.

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The strange and beautiful truth about the adjacent possible is that its boundaries grow as you explore them. Each new combination opens up the possibility of other new combinations. Think of it as a house that magically expands with each door you open. You begin in a room with four doors, each leading to a new room that you haven't visited yet. Once you open one of those doors and stroll into that room, three new doors appear, each leading to a brand-new room that you couldn't have reached from your original starting point. Keep opening new doors and eventually you'll have built a palace.

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mia reeves mia reeves (Sep 06 2016 3:54PM) : Most good things come when your least expecting it. If you want to proceed it something go for it no matter how unique it is. Things were are best thoughts and ideas come from.
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Student Ashlyn Matthews Student Ashlyn Matthews (Sep 06 2016 10:56PM) : I agree. We have so many improvements in technology. I wonder, what is going to be next?
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Mekenna Vaughan Mekenna Vaughan (Sep 07 2016 1:01AM) : i agree. if you want something then go and get it
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Basic fatty acids will naturally self-organize into spheres lined with a dual layer of molecules, very similar to the membranes that define the boundaries of modern cells. Once the fatty acids combine to form those bounded spheres, a new wing of the adjacent possible opens up, because those molecules implicitly create a fundamental division between the inside and outside of the sphere. This division is the very essence of a cell. Once you have an "inside," you can put things there: food, organelles, genetic code.

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The march of cultural innovation follows the same combinatorial pattern: Johannes Gutenberg, for instance, took the older technology of the screw press, designed originally for making wine, and reconfigured it with metal type to invent the printing press.

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Paige Hickam Paige Hickam (Sep 06 2016 2:21PM) : Any innovation can have some of the same patterns as another. Just because you use some of those same patterns does not mean it is exactly the same!
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mia reeves mia reeves (Sep 06 2016 3:56PM) : I agree many people have the same thoughts but not always the same thinking behind it.
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Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt (Sep 06 2016 4:26PM) : I also agree, how could we make progress in the world without innovation? [Edited]
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Danny Zeidan Danny Zeidan (Sep 12 2016 1:29AM) : I don't believe we'd be able to. It would simply be a step back in life.
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More recently, a graduate student named Brent Constantz, working on a Ph.D. that explored the techniques that coral polyps use to build amazingly durable reefs, realized that those same techniques could be harnessed to heal human bones. Several IPOs later, the cements that Mr. Constantz created are employed in most orthopedic operating rooms throughout the U.S. and Europe.

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Mr. Constantz's cements point to something particularly inspiring in Mr. Kauffman's notion of the adjacent possible: the continuum between natural and man-made systems. Four billion years ago, if you were a carbon atom, there were a few hundred molecular configurations you could stumble into. Today that same carbon atom can help build a sperm whale or a giant redwood or an H1N1 virus, along with every single object on the planet made of plastic.

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The premise that innovation prospers when ideas can serendipitously connect and recombine with other ideas may seem logical enough, but the strange fact is that a great deal of the past two centuries of legal and folk wisdom about innovation has pursued the exact opposite argument, building walls between ideas. Ironically, those walls have been erected with the explicit aim of encouraging innovation. They go by many names: intellectual property, trade secrets, proprietary technology, top-secret R&D labs. But they share a founding assumption: that in the long run, innovation will increase if you put restrictions on the spread of new ideas, because those restrictions will allow the creators to collect large financial rewards from their inventions. And those rewards will then attract other innovators to follow in their path.

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The problem with these closed environments is that they make it more difficult to explore the adjacent possible, because they reduce the overall network of minds that can potentially engage with a problem, and they reduce the unplanned collisions between ideas originating in different fields. This is why a growing number of large organizations -- businesses, nonprofits, schools, government agencies -- have begun experimenting with more open models of idea exchange.

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Organizations like IBM and Procter & Gamble, who have a long history of profiting from patented, closed-door innovations, have embraced open innovation platforms over the past decade, sharing their leading-edge research with universities, partners, suppliers and customers. Modeled on the success of services like Twitter and Flickr, new Web startups now routinely make their software accessible to programmers who are not on their payroll, allowing these outsiders to expand on and remix the core product in surprising new ways.

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Earlier this year, Nike announced a new Web-based marketplace it calls the GreenXchange, where it has publicly released more than 400 of its patents that involve environmentally friendly materials or technologies. The marketplace is a kind of hybrid of commercial self-interest and civic good. This makes it possible for outside firms to improve on those innovations, creating new value that Nike might ultimately be able to put to use itself in its own products.

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Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt (Sep 06 2016 4:31PM) : If Nike has environmental friendly designs why haven't they been put into effect ?
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In a sense, Nike is widening the network of minds who are actively thinking about how to make its ideas more useful, without adding any more employees. But some of its innovations might well turn out to be advantageous to industries or markets in which it has no competitive involvement whatsoever. By keeping its eco-friendly ideas behind a veil of secrecy, Nike was holding back ideas that might, in another context, contribute to a sustainable future -- without any real commercial justification.

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Hannah Reardon Hannah Reardon (Sep 07 2016 11:23AM) : I like the idea that Nike is thinking this way and I feel like more companies should do what they can to think the way Nike is in the sense of making their ideas more useful.
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A hypothetical scenario invoked by the company at the launch of the GreenXchange would have warmed the heart of Stephen Jay Gould: perhaps an environmentally-sound rubber originally invented for use in running shoes could be adapted by a mountain bike company to create more sustainable tires. Apparently, Gould's tires-to-sandals principle works both ways. Sometimes you make footwear by putting tires to new use, and sometimes you make tires by putting footwear to new use.

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There is a famous moment in the story of the near-catastrophic Apollo 13 mission -- wonderfully captured in the Ron Howard film -- in which the mission control engineers realize they need to create an improvised carbon dioxide filter, or the astronauts will poison the lunar module atmosphere with their own exhalations before they return to Earth. The astronauts have plenty of carbon "scrubbers" onboard, but these filters were designed for the original, damaged spacecraft and don't fit the ventilation system of the lunar module they are using as a lifeboat to return home. Mission control quickly assembles a "tiger team" of engineers to hack their way through the problem.

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Danny Zeidan Danny Zeidan (Sep 04 2016 9:04PM) : This part talks about how letting the creative mind take control will not ensure survival, but give you a better chance.
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Paige Hickam Paige Hickam (Sep 06 2016 2:18PM) : Agreeing, Understanding more

I agree. When using your mind and trying to think of something better you always have that what if this doesn’t work. Well it might not but there are always chances when using your creative mind that it does work and it does create survival.

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Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt Terry Elliot Ryan Schmitt (Sep 06 2016 4:29PM) : Nothing can guarantee survival for a human, however creative minds can lead to amazing things. [Edited]
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Hannah Reardon Hannah Reardon (Sep 07 2016 11:18AM) : Taking chances and letting your creative mind come out will only bring about more ideas that lead to more changes.
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Natalie Parrott Natalie Parrott (Sep 07 2016 11:58AM) : I agree with you. You have to take a chance if you want to see change.
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In the movie, Deke Slayton, head of flight crew operations, tosses a jumbled pile of gear on a conference table: hoses, canisters, stowage bags, duct tape and other assorted gadgets. He holds up the carbon scrubbers. "We gotta find a way to make this fit into a hole for this," he says, and then points to the spare parts on the table, "using nothing but that."

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The space gear on the table defines the adjacent possible for the problem of building a working carbon scrubber on a lunar module. (The device they eventually concocted, dubbed the "mailbox," performed beautifully.) The canisters and nozzles are like the ammonia and methane molecules of the early Earth, or those Toyota parts heating an incubator: They are the building blocks that create -- and limit -- the space of possibility for a specific problem. The trick to having good ideas is not to sit around in glorious isolation and try to think big thoughts. The trick is to get more parts on the table.

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Steven Johnson is the author of seven books, including "The Invention of Air." This essay is adapted from "Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation" by Steven Johnson, to be published by Riverhead Hardcover on Oct. 5. Copyright by Steven Johnson.

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DMU Timestamp: August 24, 2016 00:30

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