Mindblown: a blog about philosophy.

  • Imagine You’re The Sage

    Take on the persona of an oracle. Why are we really doing this? What’s the true insight and purpose of this project? Is there a deeper truth? What would someone truly wise do?

  • Imagine You’re The Customer

    What does a day in the life of your target audience look like? What are their fears and aspirations? What might they not understand? What might we not understand about them?

  • Imagine You’re The Devil

    What would someone ruthless do? How could you use mischief to disrupt the situation? What if we broke some stuff? How might someone evil exploit you?

  • Challenge

    Creative breakthroughs often arise from challenging conventions. What assumptions have already been made? Could they be wrong, or shifted? What if the brief is too narrow? Too wide? Pretend to be your competitor.

  • Extremify

    Looking at extremes can bring insights into sharp relief. What would happen if you amplified the problem or solution? What if it was minuscule or all-consuming; what would a global response look like?

  • No Limits

    Removing limitations means removing assumptions, which can result in novel perspectives and solutions. Imagine you have unlimited superpowers, budget, time, or technological capability to solve the problem. What would a god do?

  • Recontext

    How would you solve the problem in the future or past? What about a different cultural context? Try 5 ideas in 5 minutes to generate different perspectives then pick two or three to ideate from

  • Inversion

    By flipping the perspective you can open up new insights. What’s the opposite of the problem or solution? What would be the worst idea? Who isn’t the target audience?

  • Mind Map

    Write your objective in a bubble in the middle of the page and branch out nested and associated ideas to discover new perspectives as stimuli. Try putting your mind map on the wall while brainstorming

  • Tricktionary

    Use random stimuli like reading out words from the dictionary to provoke a response, or try using the last letter of one word as the starting letter for another word. Free-associate words and concepts to spark connections.

Got any book recommendations?