Induction
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(It can help to start with the short piece on deduction [https://www.mindatelier.co.uk/articles/deduction/].) Induction is a process we can use to create rules which we might then put to use via deduction. We need it because in a messy world, there are limits to the
Deduction
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Formal logic originated in many parts of the Ancient World and in many ways Aristotle [https://www.mindatelier.co.uk/articles/aristotle-in-short/] looms large simply because much of what he wrote survived and found application later. Thus, for convenience key elements, including deductive reasoning, are grouped with him on this
Aristotle - in short
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Aristotle is a huge influence on how we think about thinking in the "Western World." Like many philosophers of his era, his writings go far beyond what we now classify as "philosophy" into things we might now call science and the arts. It's also
Think Like A Curator - Interview
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Patricia-Andra Hurducaș has begun an intriguing Interintellect curation series [https://interintellect.com/series/the-curation-series-with-patricia-hurducas/] on the role of curator, inspiration, ideas, aesthetic perception, galleries, and the museums of the future. The next Salon in the series [https://interintellect.com/salon/the-curation-series-copying-the-curator-part-2-with-patricia-hurducas/] is on June 29th at 19:00 BST, 20:
Creative Problem Solving - In short
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This is a short summary of the Creative Problem Solving process. A longer piece will appear at a later date. [Datestamp: 01/06/2021] The roots of the Creative Problem Solving process are in the 1953 book Applied Imagination by Alex Osborn. (Osborn was the original "O" in
Key Atelier Influences
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As the Project [https://www.mindatelier.co.uk/articles/the-mind-atelier-project/] begins it seems important to outline some key bodies of work that have influenced the project. This is not exhaustive and in concentrating on bodies of work it omits individual and osmotic influences, but that's a longer tale