Have you ever experienced a blinding flash of inspiration? Perhaps you got a whole vision for a new product, a new direction in life or even a great idea for a best selling book.
If so, congratulations, you’ve had a light bulb moment and experienced the Art of how to have them.
Have you ever had an idea in this way, and not done anything about it, only to see someone else bring it to market a few years later? If so, what you are perhaps missing is knowing the Science of how to capitalize on your light bulb moment.
This is what this book is all about - how to have light bulb moments on demand and then how to make them bring real world results for your benefit and for the benefit of others.
Now when we think about the light bulb, we often think of Edison who is popularized as its inventor. What is somewhat ironic is that Edison didn’t really have a light bulb moment about the invention of the light bulb. If he had had a true light bulb moment, he may have come up with the scientific breakthrough that led to the energy saving bulb which, in turn, may have prevented global warming.
Edison was what is known as an empiricist. He didn’t so much invent the light bulb as develop it, based on other peoples’ prior work, using a process of trial and error.
One of his assistants even died in the process. He was sent on a mission in Latin America to bring back exotic bamboo samples where he contracted yellow fever and never made it back. Edison even electrocuted an elephant in the name of science, but more on why he did this later. Such is the price of scientific progress.
The electric light was first demonstrated by many people, including Humphrey Davy, 70 or so years before Edison started working on it. Davy came up with the carbon arc lamp which is still used on film sets and on ships today. What Edison actually came up with was the long lasting light bulb and his mission was to make it affordable for everyone.
“I want candles to only be affordable by the rich,” he was quoted.
Edison came up with a filament that lasted about 40 hours. In order to make it work, though, he also had to develop the generating system to make it illuminate in the first place, the light switch to turn it on and off, and the Edison screw so it could be replaced at the end of its life.
It is truer to say he perfected the science of the crystallization of the light bulb moment. He actually brought the concept of the research and development laboratory to the world. He was one of the first technologists to court and extract money from venture capitalists. He continually refined, improved and cross-fertilized ideas from one field to the other. Many of the elements of the electric light system he came up with were based on his work on the telegraph and the phonograph.
He made loads of mistakes and he learned much in the process. Apocryphally, Thomas Alva Edison tried out about 10,000 or so materials for the filament before he found the one that worked best. When he was challenged on why he couldn’t have scientifically worked out that one straight away, he is alleged to have said, “Yes, but now I know 9,999 things that don’t work.”
In turn his work naturally inspired others. His work on encoding techniques for the telegraph has led to us having incredible broadband speeds down copper wire with very limited bandwidth. Many of us now carry around a descendent of the phonograph in our pocket in the form of an MP3 player, or as one of many applications on our ‘smart phones’.
Edison played this role of empiricist to his dying day. Even in his last few months, he engaged with his physicians, experimenting with diet and drugs to see what made him feel better.
Now I’m not suggesting you go as far as to challenge your doctor or electrocute an elephant, but we will look his methods, and those of other geniuses, throughout this book so you too will learn how to bring your own ideas to life.
Scientific, artistic and even spiritual light bulb moments have occurred throughout human history.
The apostle Paul being struck by ‘lightning’ on the road to Damascus was probably a good example of one of them. He switched sides from being a persecutor of Christians, and others, to an evangelist.
Archimedes was set a challenge to determine the volume of an object with an irregular shape. It was a crown made for King Hiero II, who had supplied pure gold to be used to make it. The King wanted to know whether some silver had been sneaked into the mix. Archimedes obviously couldn’t melt it down to a regular shape in order to work out its volume. The answer came apparently when he got in a bath and worked out, in a flash, that the volume of water displaced was proportional to density and volume of any matter.
Archimedes then took to the streets naked, so excited by his discovery that he had forgotten to get dressed, crying “Eureka!” meaning “I have found it!”.
Apparently, so it turned out, some silver had indeed been mixed in; we can guess what fate befell the crown’s maker.
Isaac Newton was reported to have experienced a light bulb moment when an apple fell on his head. It has been said that he got the whole of the theory of gravity in less than a second and that it took him the rest of his life to get it down on paper. The apple story paints a good image, however, it is probably an urban myth.
Leonardo da Vinci also had a light bulb moment when he came up with his drawing of the helicopter and had the prescience of caution to invent the parachute in case it didn’t work.
What is interesting is that in the time of Archimedes, Da Vinci and Newton, the light bulb hadn’t been invented, yet the mental faculty to experience light bulb moments has apparently been with us for many thousands of years.
Indeed they do have other names like the Archimedes’ ‘Eureka Moments’, or the German ‘Aha-Erlebnis’ - or Aha Experience - coined by the psychologist Karl Bühler.
Today we call them light bulb moments and it is uncertain exactly when and where this phrase came into common usage. We all know what it means though - at the flick of a metaphorical switch, for an idea to illuminate in our heads that takes us in a new and exciting direction.
Learning how to experience them on demand is what this book is all about.