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Late in January 1975,
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a 17-year-old German girl
called Vera Brandes
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walked out onto the stage
of the Cologne Opera House.
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The auditorium was empty.
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It was lit only by the dim, green glow
of the emergency exit sign.
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This was the most
exciting day of Vera's life.
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She was the youngest
concert promoter in Germany
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and she had persuaded
the Cologne Opera House
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to host a late-night concert of jazz
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from the American musician, Keith Jarrett.
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1400 people were coming.
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And in just a few hours,
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Jarrett would walk out on the same stage,
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he'd sit down at the piano,
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and without rehearsal or sheet music,
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he would begin to play.
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But right now,
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Vera was introducing Keith
to the piano in question,
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and it wasn't going well.
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Jarrett looked to the instrument
a little wearily,
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played a few notes,
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walked around it,
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played a few more notes,
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muttered something to his producer.
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Then the producer
came over to Vera and said ...
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"If you don't get a new piano,
Keith can't play."
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There'd been a mistake.
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The opera house had provided
the wrong instrument.
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This one had this harsh,
tinny upper register,
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because all the felt had worn away.
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The black notes were sticking,
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the white notes were out of tune,
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the pedals didn't work,
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and the piano itself was just too small,
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it wouldn't create the volume
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that would fill a large space
such as the Cologne Opera House.
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So Keith Jarrett left.
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He went and sat outside in his car,
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leaving Vera Brandes
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to get on the phone
to try to find a replacement piano.
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Now she got a piano tuner
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but she couldn't get a new piano.
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And so she went outside
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and she stood there in the rain,
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talking to Keith Jarrett,
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begging him not to cancel the concert.
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And he looked out of his car
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at this bedraggled,
rain-drenched German teenager,
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took pity on her,
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and said,
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"Never forget ... only for you."
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And so a few hours later,
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Jarrett did indeed step out
onto the stage of the opera house,
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he sat down at the unplayable piano,
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and began.
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(Music)
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Within moments it became clear
that something magical was happening.
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Jarrett was avoiding
those upper registers,
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he was sticking to the middle
tones of the keyboard,
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which gave the piece
a soothing, ambient quality.
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But also, because the piano was so quiet,
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he had to set up these rumbling,
repetitive riffs in the bass.
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And he stood up twisting,
pounding down on the keys,
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desperately trying to create enough volume
to reach the people in the back row.
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It's an electrifying performance.
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It somehow has this peaceful quality
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and at the same time it's full of energy,
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it's dynamic.
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And the audience loved it.
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Audiences continue to love it
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because the recording of the Köln Concert
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is the best-selling piano album in history
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and the best-selling
solo jazz album in history.
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Keith Jarrett had been handed a mess.
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He had embraced that mess and it soared.
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But let's think for a moment
about Jarrett's initial instinct.
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He didn't want to play.
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Of course,
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I think any of us,
in any remotely similar situation,
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would feel the same way,
we'd have the same instinct.
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We don't want to be asked
to do good work with bad tools.
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We don't want to have to overcome
unnecessary hurdles.
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But Jarrett's instinct was wrong,
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and thank goodness he changed his mind.
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And I think our instinct is also wrong.
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I think we need to gain
a bit more appreciation
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for the unexpected advantages
of having to cope with a little mess.
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So let me give you some examples
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from cognitive psychology,
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from complexity science,
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from social psychology,
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and of course, rock 'n' roll.
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So cognitive psychology first.
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We've actually known for a while
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that certain kinds of difficulty,
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certain kinds of obstacle,
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can actually improve our performance.
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For example,
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the psychologist Daniel Oppenheimer,
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a few years ago,
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teamed up with high school teachers.
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And he asked them to reformat the handouts
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that they were giving
to some of their classes.
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So the regular handout would be formatted
in something straightforward,
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such as Helvetica or Times New Roman.
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But half these classes were getting
handouts that were formatted
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in something sort of intense,
like Haettenschweiler,
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or something with a zesty bounce,
like Comic Sans italicized.
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Now, these are really ugly fonts,
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and they're difficult fonts to read.
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But at the end of the semester,
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students were given exams,
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and the students who'd been asked
to read the more difficult fonts,
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had actually done better on their exams,
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in a variety of subjects.
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And the reason is,
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the difficult font had slowed them down,
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forced them to work a bit harder,
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to think a bit more
about what they were reading,
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to interpret it ...
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and so they learned more.
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Another example.
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The psychologist Shelley Carson
has been testing Harvard undergraduates
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for the quality
of their attentional filters.
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What do I mean by that?
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What I mean is,
imagine you're in a restaurant,
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you're having a conversation,
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there are all kinds of other conversations
going on in the restaurant,
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you want to filter them out,
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you want to focus
on what's important to you.
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Can you do that?
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If you can, you have
good, strong attentional filters.
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But some people really struggle with that.
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Some of Carson's undergraduate
subjects struggled with that.
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They had weak filters,
they had porous filters --
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let a lot of external information in.
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And so what that meant is they were
constantly being interrupted
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by the sights and the sounds
of the world around them.
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If there was a television on
while they were doing their essays,
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they couldn't screen it out.
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Now, you would think
that that was a disadvantage ...
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but no.
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When Carson looked at what
these students had achieved,
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the ones with the weak filters
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were vastly more likely
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to have some real
creative milestone in their lives,
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to have published their first novel,
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to have released their first album.
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These distractions were actually
grists to their creative mill.
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They were able to think outside the box
because their box was full of holes.
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Let's talk about complexity science.
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So how do you solve a really complex --
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the world's full
of complicated problems --
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how do you solve
a really complicated problem?
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For example, you try to make a jet engine.
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There are lots and lots
of different variables,
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the operating temperature, the materials,
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all the different dimensions, the shape.
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You can't solve that kind
of problem all in one go,
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it's too hard.
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So what do you do?
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Well, one thing you can do
is try to solve it step-by-step.
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So you have some kind of prototype
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and you tweak it,
you test it, you improve it.
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You tweak it, you test it, you improve it.
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Now, this idea of marginal gains
will eventually get you a good jet engine.
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And it's been quite widely
implemented in the world.
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So you'll hear about it, for example,
in high performance cycling,
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web designers will talk about trying
to optimize their web pages,
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they're looking
for these step-by-step gains.
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That's a good way
to solve a complicated problem.
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But you know what would
make it a better way?
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A dash of mess.
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You add randomness,
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early on in the process,
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you make crazy moves,
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you try stupid things that shouldn't work,
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and that will tend to make
the problem-solving work better.
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And the reason for that is
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the trouble with the step-by-step process,
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the marginal gains,
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is they can walk you
gradually down a dead end.
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And if you start with the randomness,
that becomes less likely,
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and you problem-solving
becomes more robust.
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Let's talk about social psychology.
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So the psychologist Katherine Phillips,
with some colleagues,
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recently gave murder mystery
problems to some students,
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and these students
were collected in groups of four
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and they were given dossiers
with information about a crime --
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alibis and evidence,
witness statements and three suspects.
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And the groups of four students
were asked to figure out who did it,
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who committed the crime.
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And there were two treatments
in this experiment.
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In some cases these were four friends,
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they all knew each other well.
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In other cases,
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three friends and a stranger.
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And you can see where I'm going with this.
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Obviously I'm going to say
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that the groups with the stranger
solved the problem more effectively,
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which is true, they did.
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Actually, they solved the problem
quite a lot more effectively.
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So the groups of four friends,
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they only had a fifty-fifty chance
of getting the answer right.
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Which is actually not that great --
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in multiple choice, the three answers?
Fifty-fifty's not good.
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(Laughter)
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The three friends and the stranger,
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even though the stranger
didn't have any extra information,
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even though it was just a case
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of how that changed the conversation
to accommodate that awkwardness,
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the three friends and the stranger,
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they had a 75% chance
of finding the right answer.
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That's quite a big leap in performance.
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But I think what's really interesting
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is not just that the three friends
and the stranger did a better job,
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but how they felt about it.
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So when Katherine Phillips
interviewed the groups of four friends,
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they had a nice time,
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they also thought they'd done a good job.
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They were complacent.
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When she spoke to the three
friends and the stranger,
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they had not had a nice time --
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it's actually rather difficult,
it's rather awkward ...
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and they were full of doubt.
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They didn't think they'd done a good job
even though they had.
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And I think that really exemplifies
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the challenge that we're
dealing with here.
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Because, yeah --
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the ugly font,
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the awkward stranger,
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the random move ...
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these disruptions help us solve problems,
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they help us become more creative.
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But we don't feel that they're helping us.
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We feel that they're
getting in the way ...
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and so we resist.
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And that's why the last example
is really important.
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So I want to talk about somebody
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from the background
of the world of rock 'n' roll.
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And you may know him,
he's actually a TED-ster.
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His name is Brian Eno.
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He is an ambient composer --
rather brilliant.
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He's also a kind of catalyst
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behind some of the great
rock 'n' roll albums of the last 40 years.
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He's worked with David Bowie on "Heroes",
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he worked with U2 on "Achtung Baby"
and "The Joshua Tree",
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he's worked with DEVO,
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he's worked with Coldplay,
he's worked with everybody.
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And what does he do to make
these great rock bands better?
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Well, he makes a mess.
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He disrupts their creative processes.
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It's his role to be the awkward stranger.
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It's his role to tell them
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that they have to play
the unplayable piano.
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And one of the ways
in which he creates this disruption
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is through this remarkable
deck of cards --
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I have my signed copy here --
thank you, Brian.
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They're called The Oblique Strategies,
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he developed them with a friend of his.
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And when they're stuck in the studio,
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Brian Eno will reach for one of the cards.
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He'll draw one at random,
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and he'll make the band
follow the instructions on the card.
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So this one ...
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"Change instrument roles."
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Yeah, everyone swap instruments --
Drummer on the piano --
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Brilliant, brilliant idea.
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"Look closely at the most embarrassing
details. Amplify them."
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"Make a sudden, destructive,
unpredictable action. Incorporate."
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These cards are disruptive.
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Now, they've proved their worth
in album after album.
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The musicians hate them.
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(Laughter)
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So Phil Collins was playing drums
on an early Brian Eno album.
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He got so frustrated he started
throwing beer cans across the studio.
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Carlos Alomar, great rock guitarist,
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working with Eno
on David Bowie's "Lodger" album,
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and at one point
he turns to Brian and says,
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"Brian, this experiment is stupid."
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But the thing is
it was a pretty good album,
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but also,
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Carlos Alomar, 35 years later,
now uses The Oblique Strategies.
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And he tells his students
to use The Oblique Strategies
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because he's realized something.
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Just because you don't like it
doesn't mean it isn't helping you.
-
The strategies actually
weren't a deck of cards originally,
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they were just a list --
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list on the recording studio wall.
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A checklist of things
you might try if you got stuck.
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The list didn't work.
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Know why?
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Not messy enough.
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Your eye would go down the list
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and it would settle on whatever
was the least disruptive,
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the least troublesome,
-
which of course misses the point entirely.
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And what Brian Eno came to realize was,
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yes, we need to run
the stupid experiments,
-
we need to deal
with the awkward strangers,
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we need to try to read the ugly fonts.
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These things help us.
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They help us solve problems,
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they help us be more creative.
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But also ...
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we really need some persuasion
if we're going to accept this.
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So however we do it ...
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whether it's sheer willpower,
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whether it's the flip of a card,
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or whether it's a guilt trip
from a German teenager,
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all of us, from time to time,
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need to sit down and try and play
the unplayable piano.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
Brian Greene
The headline on this talk has been changed. The new headline is: How frustration can make us more creative