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What Can Five Wet Monkeys Teach Us About Creativity?

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Published on Aug 24, 2011 by

Complete video at: http://fora.tv/conference/chq_creativity_innovation

Col. Casey Haskins, an accomplished military officer and professor at West Point Academy, argues that one of the biggest obstacles to creativity is a reliance on the status quo. "We do lots of stuff that we have no idea why we do it, and we don't even bother to examine it, and in some instances, that does harm," explains Haskins.

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Sparking a Culture of Creativity and Innovation

Col. Casey Haskins, an extremely accomplished military officer and professor at West Point Academy, uses psychology, philosophy, and "out of the box thinking" to create a new train of thought for successful problem solving.

New ideas and new ways of looking may provide the answers to challenges to U.S. competitiveness in business, education, government, and health care. In this week, our guests will reveal how they have created cultures of creativity that foster innovation. We'll define "design thinking" and learn about collaborations that extend knowledge across disparate fields and add value to society, products and services. We will discover how creativity can be taught and learned, and how to inspire creative confidence in ourselves and others. - Chautauqua Institution

Col. Casey Haskins is director of the Department of Military Instruction at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, responsible for adapting military instruction to demands for more limber, creative operating methods. As profiled in the book Little Bets: How Breakthrough Ideas Emerge from Small Discoveries, by Peter Sims, Haskins oversees military tactics courses that West Point requires cadets to take during their first three years, and a three-month summer training program that emphasizes leadership, in which he and his colleagues construct immersion experiences to prepare cadets for what they'll encounter on modern battlefields.

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  • Sounds like he's talking about religion.

  • Yeah, like having a military that consumes 4.7% of US GDP. The US military eats up 0.28 cents out o every dollar in tax receipts. Sixty-five years after the end of WWII the US still has bases in Germany and Japan.

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  • This is the sickest experiment I've ever heard of.

  • so is this a just story or a real experiment ?@ 0:08 i think that would be important to mention

  • so is this a just story or a real experiment ? i think that would be important to mention

  • Get to the point!

  • @ProNorden ha ha nice one

  • @bythefault the pentagon's $1.5 Trillion budget is 10% of annual US GDP of $14 trillion-ish.

  • Fasting, offering prayers. All can be considered :D

  • that was the most beautiful critique of the human race i have ever heard :) and it was so, because there were monkeys :)

  • So says Casey Haskins .....while wearing a tie.

  • This is the lead in to "The Planet of the Apes?" It becomes a cruel analogy, but it does fit both religion and military mind set.

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