Frighteningly Ambitious Startup Ideas
5 weeks ago by tsuomela
"This phenomenon is one of the most important things you can understand about startups. You'd expect big startup ideas to be attractive, but actually they tend to repel you. And that has a bunch of consequences. It means these ideas are invisible to most people who try to think of startup ideas, because their subconscious filters them out. Even the most ambitious people are probably best off approaching them obliquely."
business
entrepreneur
entrepreneurship
startup
ideas
inspiration
from delicious
5 weeks ago by tsuomela
Five Darwinian/Posthumanist Theses « Larval Subjects .
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
"It’s no exaggeration to suggest that Darwin’s account of speciation is the most revolutionary idea in the last two hundred years. In claiming this, I am not original, for this is also the thesis of Dennett in Darwin’s Dangerous Idea. I will never have words fine enough to capture the greatness of Darwin, but nonetheless it is important to at least attempt the articulation of what is so revolutionary in his thought." Annotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http://larvalsubjects.wordpress.com/2012/04/02/eight-darwinianposthumanist-theses
evolution
ideas
object-oriented-ontology
objects
intellectual
history
from delicious
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
PopTech : Duncan Watts - Social contagion: What do we really know?
10 weeks ago by tsuomela
"Again, we don’t know for sure, but we suspect that the analogy with biological disease is badly flawed. For example, whereas it is probably true that most people are susceptible to HIV, our susceptibility to any particular idea, product, musical artists, etc. varies tremendously, depending on our tastes, backgrounds, and circumstances. Unlike for influenza, to which you’re either exposed or not exposed, even the ideas you do encounter have to compete for attention with everything else that you’re exposed to. And unlike models of disease, which assume that disease spreads exclusively from person to person, information can be disseminated by the media and advertising as well as by word of mouth.
All of these differences, along with many others, could dramatically alter the prospects for social epidemics, as well as introduce other mechanisms entirely by which social change can come about, yet models of social influence reflect very little of this added complexity"
social-contagion
ideas
networks
influence
persuasion
society
epidemics
via:cshalizi
from delicious
All of these differences, along with many others, could dramatically alter the prospects for social epidemics, as well as introduce other mechanisms entirely by which social change can come about, yet models of social influence reflect very little of this added complexity"
10 weeks ago by tsuomela
Adam Smith and the Invisible Hand: From Metaphor to Myth · Econ Journal Watch: Adam Smith, invisible hand, metaphor
12 weeks ago by tsuomela
"Adam Smith and the ‘invisible hand’ are nearly synonymous in modern economic thinking. Adam Smith is strongly associated with the invisible hand, understood as a general rule that people in realising their self-interests unintentionally benefit the public good. The attribution to Smith is challengeable. Adam Smith’s use of the metaphor was much more modest
people(AdamSmith)
history
economics
ideology
invisible
metaphor
ideas
from delicious
12 weeks ago by tsuomela
The 20th Century Myth of Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand in Two Graphs « A (Budding) Sociologist's Commonplace Book
12 weeks ago by tsuomela
Annotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http://asociologist.com/2012/03/07/the-20th-century-myth-of-adam-smiths-invisible-hand-in-two-graphs
people(AdamSmith)
history
economics
ideology
invisible
metaphor
ideas
from delicious
12 weeks ago by tsuomela
Overcoming Bias : Dear Young Eccentric
january 2012 by tsuomela
"Think of it this way. When some folks go out of their way to show off their defiance and rebellion, others go out of their way to publicly squash such rebellion, to assert their dominance. But if you are not overtly rebellious, you can get away with a lot of abstract idea rebellion — few folks will even notice such deviations, and fewer still will care. So, ask yourself, do you want to look like a rebel, or do you want to be a rebel?"
rebellion
weird
ideas
eccentricity
creativity
novelty
behavior
from delicious
january 2012 by tsuomela
Finding Your Next Big (Adjacent) Idea - James L. McQuivey - Harvard Business Review
september 2011 by tsuomela
To get this right, you have to think right. The idea of adjacent possibilities started with evolutionary biologist Stuart Kauffman, who used it to explain how such powerful biological innovations as sight and flight came into being. More recently, Steven Johnson, in Where Good Ideas Come From, showed that it's also applicable to science, culture, and technology. The core of the idea: People arrive at the best new ideas when they combine prior (adjacent) ideas in new ways. Most combinations fail
creativity
innovation
business
ideas
adjacent
possibility
september 2011 by tsuomela
I Love You but You're Going to Hell
august 2011 by tsuomela
"The goal is not to convert people to the other side. Rather, it is to overcome the mutual bewilderment and demonization that can happen when each side hears the arguments of the other. It is to get over the kind of assumption that anyone who holds those other positions must be stupid or evil."
weblog-individual
ideas
history
intellectual
conflict
culture-war
understanding
august 2011 by tsuomela
markets as… « orgtheory.net
april 2011 by tsuomela
"OK, this is admittedly very, very loose — but here are some different characterizations of markets, sort of a rough and naive meta-taxonomy of markets:"
markets
metaphor
list
ideas
april 2011 by tsuomela
Adaptation « Easily Distracted
april 2011 by tsuomela
"Another concept that I haven’t tried yet but which seems like a natural possibility is guiding students through the preparatory work that an author or producer might do if they were adapting a body of knowledge, a setting or a story for some kind of media besides scholarly publication. Say, what kinds of researched knowledge you might need if you were going to write a script, make costumes, find locations, fine-tune dialogue, craft audio, and so on for a film working with a particular historical setting. "
teaching
adaptation
pedagogy
ideas
april 2011 by tsuomela
Organic Startup Ideas
april 2011 by tsuomela
"So if you want to come up with organic startup ideas, I'd encourage you to focus more on the idea part and less on the startup part. Just fix things that seem broken, regardless of whether it seems like the problem is important enough to build a company on. If you keep pursuing such threads it would be hard not to end up making something of value to a lot of people, and when you do, surprise, you've got a company."
business
startup
ideas
april 2011 by tsuomela
The SF Site: SF Masterworks Reviews Archive
january 2011 by tsuomela
Short reviews of the Orion SF Masterworks series of books.
sf
fiction
lists
publisher
book-club
ideas
january 2011 by tsuomela
The Smart Set
january 2011 by tsuomela
The Smart Set is an online magazine covering culture and ideas, arts and science, global and national affairs — everything from literature to shopping, medicine to sports, philosophy to food. The Smart Set strives to present big ideas on the small, the not-so-small, and the everyday.
online
magazine
literature
ideas
culture
arts
science
writing
january 2011 by tsuomela
All Our Ideas - A Suggestion Box for the Digital Age
january 2011 by tsuomela
"All Our Ideas is a platform that enables groups to collect and prioritize ideas in a transparent, democratic, and bottom-up way. It’s a suggestion box for the digital age."
collaboration
ideas
crowdsourcing
tool
polling
internet
web2.0
january 2011 by tsuomela
Kickstarter
october 2010 by tsuomela
Kickstarter is a new way to fund creative ideas and ambitious endeavors.
We believe that...
• A good idea, communicated well, can spread fast and wide.
• A large group of people can be a tremendous source of money and encouragement.
Kickstarter is powered by a unique all-or-nothing funding method where projects must be fully-funded or no money changes hands.
crowdsourcing
funding
creativity
business
community
ideas
projects
social
We believe that...
• A good idea, communicated well, can spread fast and wide.
• A large group of people can be a tremendous source of money and encouragement.
Kickstarter is powered by a unique all-or-nothing funding method where projects must be fully-funded or no money changes hands.
october 2010 by tsuomela
Forget Brainstorming - Newsweek
july 2010 by tsuomela
What you think you know about fostering creativity is wrong. A look at what really works.
creativity
innovation
brainstorming
education
ideas
psychology
july 2010 by tsuomela
Front Page | Institute for New Economic Thinking
july 2010 by tsuomela
The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) is an organization created to promote changes in economic theory and practice through conferences, research grants, joint ventures with academic and research institutions and other education initiatives. The Institute seeks to create an environment nourished by open discourse and empower the next generation of scholars with the necessary support to accelerate and advance new and important thinking on economic issues.
economics
institutes
research
finance
politics
ideas
july 2010 by tsuomela
Big-Tent Problems « Easily Distracted
june 2010 by tsuomela
So here’s one thing I was thinking about: what intellectual issues and questions by their nature require discussion between a very heterogenous group of disciplines and intellects for innovative solutions or some kind of forward motion to emerge?
Almost any problem or question could probably benefit from having more than one perspective or angle devoted to it, but for many academic questions or policy problems, the natural range of useful contributions ought to be fairly narrow....I’m focused here just on intellectual and applied problems where heterogeneity in methods, bodies of knowledge and perspective are a requirement for progress. A few examples, and I’d be glad to hear of more along these lines: SETI, artificial intelligence, economic development, education, cultural creation
dialogue
problem-solving
diversity
ideas
idea-generation
Almost any problem or question could probably benefit from having more than one perspective or angle devoted to it, but for many academic questions or policy problems, the natural range of useful contributions ought to be fairly narrow....I’m focused here just on intellectual and applied problems where heterogeneity in methods, bodies of knowledge and perspective are a requirement for progress. A few examples, and I’d be glad to hear of more along these lines: SETI, artificial intelligence, economic development, education, cultural creation
june 2010 by tsuomela
n+1: On Your Marx
june 2010 by tsuomela
The motor of accumulation has been sputtering for nearly four decades, and its coughs can be heard again now that the roar of combusting paper wealth is dying down. This doesn’t mean capitalism or even growth is at an end. Economists of all kinds have pinned their hopes on the transformation of laboring and saving Chinese into hardy consumers. In any case, the US consumer—a ravening appetite in a paper house—appears to be finished as the world’s buyer of last resort. It would add a nice dialectical twist to the future history of our period if it could be said that, around the time the post-Maoist Chinese took up shopping, the post-bubble Americans turned to studying Marx.
economics
recession
marxism
marx
karl
ideas
history
left
june 2010 by tsuomela
Hope — Crooked Timber
april 2010 by tsuomela
The bigger point for me is that after decades in which the left has been on the defensive, it’s time for a politics of hope. We need hope to mobilise a positive alternative to the fear, anger and tribalism on offer from the right. Centrist pragmatism provides nothing to match the enthusiasm that can be driven by fear and anger, as we have seen.
politics
philosophy
ideas
future
hope
liberal
liberalism
inequality
poverty
april 2010 by tsuomela
After the dead horses — Crooked Timber
april 2010 by tsuomela
We’ve had a fair bit of fun here lately, pointing out the silliness of those who are supposed to be the intellectual leaders of the right, in its libertarian, neoconservative and Republican tribalist versions. But, as quite a few commenters have pointed out (one using the same, maybe Oz-specific, phrase that occurred to me) the exercise does seem to savor a bit of flogging dead horses.
It seems to me necessary to go beyond this, which was one reason for my post on hope the other day. To make progress, we need to reassess where we stand and then think about where to go next. T
conservatism
politics
philosophy
libertarian
ideas
future
hope
It seems to me necessary to go beyond this, which was one reason for my post on hope the other day. To make progress, we need to reassess where we stand and then think about where to go next. T
april 2010 by tsuomela
Measure for Measure - The Boston Globe
february 2010 by tsuomela
Literary criticism could be one of our best tools for understanding the human condition. But first, it needs a radical change: embracing science
literature
criticism
critical-theory
theory
science
two-cultures
culture
ideas
february 2010 by tsuomela
The Daily Monthly
february 2010 by tsuomela
The Daily Monthly is Dave Munger's multi-layered exploration of ideas and issues affecting all of us today.
One post per day, one topic per month
weblog-individual
journalism
ideas
genre
One post per day, one topic per month
february 2010 by tsuomela
American Exceptionalism Strikes Again | Angry Bear
december 2009 by tsuomela
Comments on an graph comparing international health-care outcomes based on cost, doctors visits, etc. Puts a lot of information into a unique graph.
health-care
medicine
reform
visualization
graphics
information
statistics
international
comparison
design
ideas
inspiration
december 2009 by tsuomela
Idea Index | The Buckminster Fuller Challenge
august 2009 by tsuomela
The Idea Index serves as a tool to educate, network, and help solve problems. As an educational tool, the Index is full of hopeful, exciting ideas and solutions to pressing problems. As a networking tool, the Index allows site visitors to contact the project leaders, leave a constructive and/or encouraging comment and connect with one another. It presents a fully searchable database of socially-responsible initiatives, in all stages of development, in need of further funding and support.
design
sustainability
technology
innovation
ideas
environment
science
resources
contest
futurism
future
fuller
buckminster
visionary
august 2009 by tsuomela
Tracing information flow on a global scale using Internet chain-letter data — PNAS
august 2009 by tsuomela
Although information, news, and opinions continuously circulate in the worldwide social network, the actual mechanics of how any single piece of information spreads on a global scale have been a mystery. Here, we trace such information-spreading processes at a person-by-person level using methods to reconstruct the propagation of massively circulated Internet chain letters. We find that rather than fanning out widely, reaching many people in very few steps according to “small-world” principles, the progress of these chain letters proceeds in a narrow but very deep tree-like pattern, continuing for several hundred steps. This suggests a new and more complex picture for the spread of information through a social network. We describe a probabilistic model based on network clustering and asynchronous response times that produces trees with this characteristic structure on social-network data.
information-cascade
information-science
information
communication
email
dissemination
viral
networks
network-analysis
ideas
rumor
internet
circulation
epidemics
diffusion
research
paper
probability
model
social-networks
august 2009 by tsuomela
Chain letters reveal surprising circulation patterns
august 2009 by tsuomela
Contrary to predictions that large-scale information spreads exponentially, like an explosive epidemic, the researchers found that the letter did not reach a large number of individuals in a few steps. Rather, it took hundreds of steps of people forwarding the e-mail on to reach the 20,000 who signed the found copies.
information-cascade
information-science
information
communication
email
dissemination
viral
networks
network-analysis
ideas
rumor
internet
circulation
epidemics
diffusion
august 2009 by tsuomela
Francesca Bordogna - William James at the Boundaries: Philosophy, Science, and the Geography of Knowledge - Reviewed by Ruth Anna Putnam, Wellesley College - Philosophical Reviews - University of Notre Dame
july 2009 by tsuomela
Francesca Bordogna, William James at the Boundaries: Philosophy, Science, and the Geography of Knowledge, U. of Chicago Press, 2008,
book
review
philosophy
about(WilliamJames)
boundary-policing
psychology
history
ideas
july 2009 by tsuomela
Searching for Value in Ludicrous Ideas - Allison Arieff Blog - NYTimes.com
may 2009 by tsuomela
That’s why I am so enamored with the work of inventor/author/cartoonist/former urban planner Steven M. Johnson, a sort of R. Crumb meets R. Buckminster Fuller. Johnson is a former urban planner, and his work tends toward the nodes where social issues intersect with design and urban planning issues.
In discussing his often fantastical, sometimes silly, sometimes visionary concepts, he has said, “If I could use two words to describe what it is that I enjoy it is that I love to be sneakily outrageous . . . [It may be that] I have decided an idea has no practical worth and would never be likely to be adopted seriously (like most of my ideas), but I like it anyway.”
design
invention
ideas
idea-generation
drawing
In discussing his often fantastical, sometimes silly, sometimes visionary concepts, he has said, “If I could use two words to describe what it is that I enjoy it is that I love to be sneakily outrageous . . . [It may be that] I have decided an idea has no practical worth and would never be likely to be adopted seriously (like most of my ideas), but I like it anyway.”
may 2009 by tsuomela
What's Next - 10 Ideas Changing the World Right Now - TIME
march 2009 by tsuomela
# Jobs Are the New Assets
# Recycling the Suburbs
# The New Calvinism
# Reinstating The Interstate
# Amortality
# Africa: Open for Business
# The Rent-a-Country
# Biobanks
# Survival Stores
# Ecological Intelligence
future
predictions
ideas
# Recycling the Suburbs
# The New Calvinism
# Reinstating The Interstate
# Amortality
# Africa: Open for Business
# The Rent-a-Country
# Biobanks
# Survival Stores
# Ecological Intelligence
march 2009 by tsuomela
Confessions of an Aca/Fan: If It Doesn't Spread, It's Dead (Part Four): Thinking Through the Gift Economy
february 2009 by tsuomela
summary and discussion of Lewis Hyde on gift exchange and art. Annotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http%3A%2F%2Fhenryjenkins.org%2F2009%2F02%2Fif_it_doesnt_spread_its_dead_p_3.html
memes
media
marketing
ideas
biology
metaphor
reports
virus
viral
gifts
anthropology
art
useful-summaries
february 2009 by tsuomela
Open the Future: Futurist Scaffolding
february 2009 by tsuomela
participatory, interconnected, leapfrog Annotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http%3A%2F%2Fwww.openthefuture.com%2F2009%2F02%2Ffuturist_scaffolding.html
futurism
future
ideas
scenario
scenario-planning
february 2009 by tsuomela
Overcoming Bias: A New Day
january 2009 by tsuomela
Sometime in the next week - January 1st if you have that available, or maybe January 3rd or 4th if the weekend is more convenient - I suggest you hold a New Day, where you don't do anything old.
Don't read any book you've read before. Don't read any author you've read before. Don't visit any website you've visited before. Don't play any game you've played before. Don't listen to familiar music that you already know you'll like. If you go on a walk, walk along a new path even if you have to drive to a different part of the city for your walk. Don't go to any restaurant you've been to before, order a dish that you haven't had before. Talk to new people (even if you have to find them in an IRC channel) about something you don't spend much time discussing.
inspiration
novelty
ideals
ideas
Don't read any book you've read before. Don't read any author you've read before. Don't visit any website you've visited before. Don't play any game you've played before. Don't listen to familiar music that you already know you'll like. If you go on a walk, walk along a new path even if you have to drive to a different part of the city for your walk. Don't go to any restaurant you've been to before, order a dish that you haven't had before. Talk to new people (even if you have to find them in an IRC channel) about something you don't spend much time discussing.
january 2009 by tsuomela
Let there be markets: The evangelical roots of economics—By Gordon Bigelow (Harper's Magazine)
october 2008 by tsuomela
Neoclassical economics tends to downplay the importance of human institutions, seeing instead a system of flows and exchanges that are governed by an inherent equilibrium. Predicated on the belief that markets operate in a scientifically knowable fashion, it sees them as self-regulating mathematical miracles, as delicate ecosystems best left alone.
If there is a whiff of creationism around this idea, it is no accident. By the time the term “economics” first emerged, in the 1870s, it was evangelical Christianity that had done the most to spur the field on toward its pres ent scientific self-certainty.
economics
religion
propaganda
history
ideas
evangelical
If there is a whiff of creationism around this idea, it is no accident. By the time the term “economics” first emerged, in the 1870s, it was evangelical Christianity that had done the most to spur the field on toward its pres ent scientific self-certainty.
october 2008 by tsuomela
The M.A.P. Maker [Meaning, Abundance
august 2008 by tsuomela
To counter that, I have started creating 30-day containers in which I experiment with a new idea. Rather than steadfastly incorporating something new into my life for all eternity, I turn it into an experiment with a finite time-frame.
self-help
tip
procrastination
gtd
ideas
august 2008 by tsuomela
Massimo De Angelis and David Harvie
june 2008 by tsuomela
Cognitive Capitalism And The Rat Race: How Capital Measures Ideas And Affects In Uk Higher Education
education
criticism
labor
capitalism
measurement
ideas
academic
june 2008 by tsuomela
Web Worker Daily » Blog Archive Refactoring Your Career «
march 2007 by tsuomela
No matter how much you love your cutting-edge job, it’s not likely that you’ll be doing precisely the same thing in five years: tools, trends, and technologies are all evolving quickly, and our careers have to evolve with them.
career
ideas
march 2007 by tsuomela
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