En la vida, la sabiduría es más importante que la inteligencia. La inteligencia sin sabiduría es como un coche con acelerador, pero sin volante. Este libro, sin embargo, no se pretende un tratado sobre la sabiduría, sino una simple presentación de las «herramientas», directrices y principios necesarios para poder pensar. Pero, ¿qué es exactamente la sabiduría? Según sugiere De Bono, es el arte con el que la percepción elabora la experiencia al servicio de nuestros valores. La inteligencia consiste en ser capaz de cocinar una soberbia comida. La sabiduría es diseñar la comida que nos apetezca a partir de los ingredientes que tenemos. Se basa en la confianza, no en la arrogancia, y está siempre abierta tanto al poder de las nuevas oportunidades como a las formas de saltarse las barreras existentes entre el «ahora» y el «ayer». Implica aceptar que los demás ven el mundo de forma distinta a la nuestra y que en sus propias «burbujas de lógica» todo tiene sentido. Significa usar valores y emociones que guíen nuestra vida sin permitir que nos esclavicen. Pues la creatividad, como el humor, se basa en las conexiones inesperadas que a menudo nos parecen obvias cuando las contemplamos retrospectivamente. Así que el primer paso hacia la sabiduría bien podría ser la capacidad de reír.
Edward de Bono was a Maltese physician, author, inventor, and consultant. He is best known as the originator of the term lateral thinking (structured creativity) and the leading proponent of the deliberate teaching of thinking in schools.
Edward de Bono is too thorough to ever be accused of going off track. Indeed, there are signs where his fastidious tracking is almost too much. He explains his explanations, he interrogates what it is that he is writing and how the reader should best respond - though pointing out where choice plays a part at every point. If the book didn't live up to its title, one could see the post-structuralist bits poking out. Scholars who did work through literary theory will note some old fashioned examples of husbands and wives and their respective roles, and will be amused at the rumination on race (how Italians are a co-operative culture with designated complementary roles, for example)
A solid read but one made easy for the author by the use of mission statement and advising the reader from within the text of how they can dip in at any point and any time. A good work for those who are looking for an expanded view on wisdom and its application, rather than accepting received wisdom.
Many interesting ideas somehow didn’t gel into a cohesive book. While I will take something out of reading it, it will not be what or as much as I expected. However, I respect the originality of thought of the author.
1.5 stars. You think wow that's an audacious title, and de Bono leans in, the text tells you he banged out the ~148 pages in 4 mornings, so it's a provocation, a Provocative Operation, for you to do better.
There's nothing new here, and everything's better-explained by other authors in cognitive sciences, decision theory etc. Kinda instructive to read an original thinker with his own way of talking about things, you read and there's a click, ah he's talking about instrumental vs terminal goals, signalling, sunk cost, path dependence, hyperbolic discounting
A simple, concise self help book. It is quite unique in its style, in that every paragraph is different and is unrelated to the paragraph before it. This may be helpful to people with short attention spans, but the book lacks flow. It can get quite tedious to read at times. It is well written and some of the concepts are quite interesting. The author urges that the reader should integrate the book's teachings in real life, and that way, wisdom can be a fertilizer for growth, not a result of it.
Excelente libro, me encanto la simplicidad del contenido pero no me gustó la estructura sin títulos ni subtítulos aunque el autor lo hace de manera de liberada.
Reading this book will require a vast repertoire and experience to relate with our life to make sense and benefit from this book as the author uses a lot of experiential analogies and approach to explain his points. The author has rightly emphasized that this book is to be read one page at a time, to make time to relate the points discussed with our life. Will re read it again eftsoons.
Lots of good ideas and nuggets of wisdom. Wisdom offers a more pluralistic and multidimensional view of the world. With many possibilities without resorting to rights and wrongs - Dogma and fanaticism
Great insight on how we normally look at the world and how other possibilities may emerge if one is aware of the fault lines in thinking that we all develop through associations, experiences and acquired knowledge.