Monday, November 10, 2008

Think Like Leonardo Da Vinci - wikiHow


How to Think Like Leonardo Da Vinci


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Leonardo da Vinci was the ultimate multi-tasker: an accomplished scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, painter, sculptor, architect, botanist, musician and writer. If you want to be a Renaissance Man (or Renaissance Woman), you can learn a lot from how Leonardo da Vinci lived and thought. Based on studying the life and work of this famous polymath[1] anyone can emulate da Vinci with the following steps.

Steps


  1. Curiosita. Curiosita is an "insatiably curious approach to life and unrelenting quest for continuous learning". Great minds have one characteristic in common: they continuously ask questions throughout their lives. Leonardo's endless quest for truth and beauty clearly demonstrates this. What makes great minds different is the quality of their questions. You can increase your ability to solve problems by increasing your ability to ask good questions. Like da Vinci, you should cultivate an open mind that allows you to broaden your universe and increase your ability to explore it. Here are some ways to apply Curiosita:
    • Keep a journal. Bring a journal wherever you go and use it often. Write your ideas and thoughts there. Try to write several statements a day that start with "I wonder why/how..."
    • Observe according to a theme. Choose a theme and observe things according to the theme for a day. For example, let's say you choose "communication". For the entire day, observe every type and instance of communication you come across. You can then record your observations in your journal.
    • Stream of consciousness exercise. Pick a question and write the thoughts and associations that occur to you as they are. Don't edit them. The important thing is to keep writing. This is also referred to as freewriting.

  2. Dimostrazione. Dimostrazione is "a commitment to test knowledge through experience, persistence, and a willingness to learn from mistake". Wisdom comes from experience and the principle of Dimostrazione helps you get the most out of your experience. Here are some ways to apply Dimostrazione:
    • Check your beliefs. Do you hold any beliefs that you haven't verified through experience?
    • Three points of view. First, make a strong argument against your belief. Next, take a distant view of your belief (for example, as if you live in a different culture) and review it. Finally, find friends who can give you different perspectives.
    • Analyze the advertisements that affect you. Look at the advertisements in your favorite magazine and analyze the strategy and tactics they use. Find the advertisements that affect you most and find out why.
    • Find “anti-role models” to learn from. List the names of some people whose mistakes you want to avoid. Learn from them so that you won't encounter the same pitfalls.

  3. Sensazione. Sensazione is "the continual refinement of the senses, especially sight, as the means to enliven experience". According to da Vinci, we can best practice Dimostrazione through our senses, particularly sight. That's why one of Leonardo's mottoes is saper vadere (knowing how to see) upon which he built his work in arts and science. Here are some ways to apply Sensazione:
    • Write detailed description of an experience. For instance, describe your experience of watching a sunrise in your journal.
    • Learn how to describe a smell.
    • Learn to draw.
    • Listen to different sounds around you. Learn to listen to different intensity of sounds from the softest (e.g. your breathing) to the loudest (e.g. traffic).
    • Live in the moment. Practice mindfulness.

  4. Sfumato. Sfumato is "a willingness to embrace ambiguity, paradox, and uncertainty". An essential characteristic of da Vinci's genius is his ability to handle a sense of mystery. Here are two ways to apply Sfumato:
    • Befriend ambiguity. Find some situations in your past where you faced ambiguity (e.g. waiting to hear if your application for a job you wanted was successful). Describe how you felt.
    • Ask yourself questions that relate two opposites. For example, ask yourself how your happiest and saddest moments are related.
    • Practice the Socratic method. The goal with the Socratic method is to examine possibilities, and that is done by asking questions, not by giving answers. Socrates was known (and criticized) for asking questions to which he didn't have answers.[2] The key to using the Socratic method is to be humble. Don't assume that you or anyone knows anything for sure. Question every premise.

  5. Arte/scienza. Arte/scienza is "the development of the balance between science and art, logic and imagination". This is thinking with the “whole brain”. Mind mapping is a powerful method that can help you combine logic and imagination in your work and life. The end result of mapping should be a web-like structure of words and ideas that are somehow related in the writer's mind.
  6. Corporalita. Corporalita is "the cultivation of grace, ambidexterity, fitness, and poise". Leonardo had amazing physical ability that complemented his genius in science and arts. Here are some ways to apply Corporalita:
    • Develop a program for physical fitness. Your program should include three things: flexibility exercises, strength training, and aerobic conditioning.
    • Develop body awareness. Study anatomy. Try yoga. Dance. Do some contact juggling. Whatever strengthens the connection between body and mind, go for it.
    • Cultivate ambidexterity. Leonardo could work with both his right and left hand and regularly switched between them. You can cultivate ambidexterity by using your nondominant hand for relatively simple tasks like brushing your teeth or eating your breakfast. Later you can use your nondominant hand for writing.

  7. Connessione. Connessione is "a recognition of and appreciation for the interconnectedness of all things and phenomena". This, in other words, is systems thinking. One main source of Leonardo's creativity is his ability to form new patterns through connections and combinations of different elements. Here are some ways to apply Connessione:
    • Find ways to link things that seem unrelated. For example, you can try to find connections between a bear and the World Wide Web, or geology and Monalisa.
    • Imagine dialogues. Imagine talking with a role model to gain new perspective and insight. Or you can imagine how some role models would discuss your problem.
    • Think about how things originate. Take an object and think about what elements are involved in its creation and how.



Tips


  • Some other characteristics of da Vinci that might be worth emulating are:[3]



Warnings


  • Because of his wide variety of interests, da Vinci struggled with procrastination. On his death bed he apologized to "God and Man for leaving so much undone."[4]


Related wikiHows




Sources and Citations



  1. Gelb, Michael J. How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci. ISBN 0440508274. Main source for the ideas in this article.

  2. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/socrates-philosophy-and-socratic-method.html

  3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonardo_da_Vinci%27s_personal_life#Personal_habits_and_talents

  4. http://www.hypatiamaze.org/leonardo/leo_vinci.html



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Friday, March 7, 2008

Save Money, rotate buying a monitor then computer

If you are happy with your computer, but have a big CRT monitor. Consider upgrading to a LCD monitor. LCD monitors don't blink like a CRT and don't create stress your eyes as much. You can easily find a cheap but good LCD monitor on the Internet. But be sure it supports the inputs your computer has. If you have a CRT presently, you probably have a VGA connection. When you are looking for a monitor and keeping your computer, make sure your monitor has both VGA connections and DVI connections. Basically VGA connections are analog connections, and DVI are digital. By buying a monitor with both connections it allows you to be flexible when you buy a new computer, because most computers now a days, have DVI connections.

If your computer is slow and 3 to 5 years old, buy a new computer, and save money by using your monitor for a time until you are ready to get a new monitor. If you buy the whole package together, you run the risk of skimping and getting a computer you are not happy with, or a monitor you are not happy with. This way, you can get a nice computer, use it with your current monitor, then save up for a nice monitor. Most monitors outlast the computer, especially LCD's, they last longer than CRT monitors. Remember, if you are getting a new computer, make sure it will work with your old CRT monitor, which is most likely an analog VGA connection, but also supports DVI, so you can get a digital monitor down the road. It is not rare to find a computer that supports both these days. That may not be the case a year or two down the road.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Protect Yourself

I recently attended a discussion on security by a renowned security expert. He copyrighted the discussion, did not allow photography or video. I guess that is why he is a leader in the industry. Anyway, he brought up a couple of great points that I have felt for a while now since he gave credence to them, I thought I would share them with you.

Invest in a good anti-virus software and personal firewall. Learn how to use it. The better the firewall, the more annoying it is. Kind of like the security features in Windows Vista. If your firewall or anti-virus is not asking you if a program is okay or not, it is not a good program. It should bother every time something writes to the registry, a program is installed, a plug-in is installed. The more it prompts for you input, the more secure it will be.

As you and your computer become more stable, that is, you have all the programs and plug-ins you use on a day to day basis, you won't know it is there. And that is the point you are aiming for. Initially, very annoying... Later, very satisfying as you can surf in peace.

These aren't the experts points, but mine, the expert drove it home when he put it into perspective for me. To paraphrase, he said everyone drives a car right? Do you complain when you put gas in it? Do you complain when you spend $30 for an oil change? No, because you know it is a necessity when driving a car. Well, don't complain, because you have to pay $50 a year on good anti-virus software. That is the cost of computing in these here the aughts.

Buy the software, learn how to use it. Can't say it enough.

Monday, January 7, 2008

First Blog

I am new to this, but I hope to give tech tips and provide everyday users some advice to make computing more fun and less frustrating.

Here are my tips to you.

1) Don't be afraid. Most of the people I help with their computer, know what the problem is, they are just afraid they will mess things up by trying to fix it. Uninstall that application, remove that drive, just be careful not to delete any system files or monkey with the registry but everything else is fixable.

2) Google is your friend. If you have an error, get a screen shot or a piece of paper and write it down. The type it verbatim in Google. Chances are very good someone else has had the same problem. Don't try to remember it, you won't. Write it down, or better yet, print the screen.

3) If you are going to buy a new computer, especially a laptop/notebook, get the extended warranty. It is a small price to pay down the road, when the hard drive crashes, 13 months after you bought it.

Well that is it for now, check back often for my tips and suggestions, and don't be afraid to ask me questions you might have about your computer.