
Is there such a thing as an “original” idea?
Folk tales have no known authors because printing was not yet invented when they were first told. There were no publishing companies nor patenting offices to which one could go to for claiming ownership of the tale.
Isn’t it true that sometimes we come up with an idea which we think is so original only to find out a few days later that someone somewhere in a far, far away place across the ocean, someone had already thought of it decades or centuries ago?
Maybe there’s no such thing as an original idea, but that some are more fortunate than others in having access to a technology that can make them claim ownership of a particular idea.
I know this musing is not original either. Someone somewhere in the same town or across the ocean must have thought the same, either a minute ago or centuries ago.
Thanks for sharing, Therese! I think you’re right that there are, in a sense, no new ideas. But an old idea in a new place can often make all the difference. Have you ever read Heart of the Original by Steve Aylett? He writes about the importance of “mischief” when being creative: put an old idea in exactly the wrong place and see what happens!
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Thanks for reading, Lee! And for the book suggestion. I’ll look it up.
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