How understanding where “our” ideas come from can help us have better ideas
This piece was co-authored by Dr Nason Maani, and is cross-posted here.
The very business of writing a Substack blog is to generate ideas, to hope that some people read them, that they provoke reflection, and generate even other ideas. Because fundamentally ideas are the raw material of progress, the foundation that then can become action. In the spirit of being self-reflective about this idea generation, we launched a series we have been calling Ideas about Ideas, reflections about where these very ideas come from. In our last Ideas about Ideas post, we talked about the social life of ideas. Today, some reflections on the structures that give rise to ideas, that perpetuate ideas.
It can be tempting to think of ideas as if they arrive to us, as individuals, in flashes of insight or inspiration. But most ideas are not born that way. Instead, they are products that have been made. Ideas have funders, deadlines, and production targets. They are the output of networks, incentives, and institutions within which we all live. And that has implications for how we understand the ideas that we ourselves have, and how we engage with, absorb, agree or disagree with the ideas of others.
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