You have a chance to look at things from different angles if you manoeuvre the mind like that Australian bird that can fly upside-down and backwards. Turning problems on their head can frequently convert them into solutions
'What we cannot think, we cannot think; we cannot, therefore, say what we cannot think.' — Ludwig Wittgenstein
'All modern thought is permeated by the idea of thinking the unthinkable.' — Michel Foucault
According to cognitive psychologists, creativity is a special kind of problem-solving experience, which involves the activation of two opposite but complementary mental processes—convergent thinking and divergent thinking, as well as insight.
Merely defining creativity in ‘problem-solution’ terms is not the same as making it happen. Great industrial enterprises, much in need of brilliant invention, also need a robust continuing supply of smaller-scale creative ideas. The execution machinery then harnesses these ideas to a productive drive to turn the invention into a product.
Antony Jay wrote a biting commentary in his incisive book ‘Management and Machiavelli’ where he said grand problems and grand solutions are both useless without tackling the