I think this applies, in an odd way: Back when scientists around the
world were trying to develop nuclear power, most of them didn`t think
it was possible. (It was sort of like the long articles discussing why
it was impossible for human beings to travel in a vehicle going over
30mph, when trains were new.)
Many people were proving that nuclear fission wasn`t practically
possible, until the US blew up Hiroshima. After that, it was pretty
hard to make the argument that it wasn`t possible.
There`s no better way to develop conviction that to have solid, empiric
evidence that something is working. Not that it`s "possible," but that
it has, in fact, happened. With that kind of conviction and focus,
there seems to be an injection of ideas, inspiration, energy, and
positive outlook, all of which produce a whole new level of development.
It`s like playing the first week in a club, then having the weekend
come along where everyone has a great time with the band. It "proves"
that you`re getting over, that you have a real product, and that
there`s a functional market.
In many cases, people don`t even realize they had doubts! :-) Then
comes something like this, or the bomb, or a working train, or a
successful week in a club, and Presto!....what was leaning toward
doubt, now becomes "a fact."
To me, the really interesting question is how some people can "see" the
successful ideas ahead of time, without having much in the way of this
empiric proof. If we could bottle that, we`d be zillionaires! :-)





If you missed the one from last week click on the icon that says "The Big Idea Effect"
