Breakthroughs can take our work to new and exciting places, yet they rarely happen as often as we’d like. Are there ways to prompt these kinds of moments, so we can create them more often?
Olivia Fox Cabane and Judah Pollack tell us how in their book, The Net and the Butterfly: The Art and Practice of Breakthrough Thinking.
Olivia is the former Director of Innovative Leadership for Stanford StartX and bestselling author of The Charisma Myth. She has worked with companies like, Google, MGM, and Deloitte, and she has lectured at Harvard, MIT, and Yale.
Judah Pollack is a former faculty member at Stanford StartX and a lecturer at University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business. He has worked with organizations like Airbnb, IDEO, and the U.S. Army Special Forces.
In this interview we discuss:
How breakthrough thinking requires two systems in the brain: the Executive Network (the net) and the Default Network (the butterfly)
How we need off-task time in order for the Default Network to engage and create breakthroughs
The 4 types of breakthroughs: Eureka, Metaphor, Intuitive and Paradigm
How Eureka Breakthroughs are sudden insights that are fully formed, when everything seems to fall into place
That we are predisposed to certain kinds of breakthroughs and how it helps to honor our natural style
That no one style of breakthrough is any better than another
How Metaphorical breakthroughs help us see topics in new ways
How Intuitive breakthroughs seem like just the beginning and less easy to trust, requiring us to have faith in the process
How Steve Jobs had an intuitive breakthrough that the iPhone needed to be made of glass
That our brains our physical objects that need to build new neurotransmitter receptors in order to construct new knowledge
How our practice with exploring new experiences in the brain affects our ability to make breakthroughs
How surfing the net for new things or watching new movies can help with building the brain plasticity that helps to make breakthroughs
How curiosity enlivens brain plasticity
How fear negativity affects the Default Network and works against us having breakthroughs
Why our best ideas may come to us in the shower
How our inhibitions can cause us to feel like imposters or make us overly critical, either of which can hinder breakthrough thinking
How the placebo effect can be used to our advantage
Ways we can practice failure in order to normalize our feelings about it
Three supertools that can help us achieve breakthroughs
How the journey toward topic mastery create preconditions for breakthroughs
How implementing these practices can affect us down to the gene level
How to find the balance between our fast-paced, hyper-focused work world and the slower, more diffused approach needed for breakthrough thinking
Links to Episode Topics
Olivia Fox Cabane
Judah Pollack
The Net and the Butterfly: The Art and Practice of Breakthrough Thinking
The Charisma Myth
Stanford StartX
University of California Berkeley
The Executive Mode Network of the brain
The Default Mode Network of the brain
The Arab Spring
The Revolutions of 1848
Occupy Wall Street
Steve Jobs
Think Wrong
Neuroplasticity
Impostor Syndrome
Inner Critic
Placebo Effect
Meditation
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