The Candle photograph

The Candle

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Originally published 1886
Authors Leo Tolstoy
GenresFiction
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2286649
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About The Candle


On one occasion the overworked serfs sent a delegation to Moscow to complain of their treatment to their lord, but they obtained no satisfaction. . . .

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... The 52-year-old believes she started to became ill in 2018 because she " overdid it and burnt The Candle at both ends"...

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... It s not a real baby, it s a doll " The Candle of my life" is how Omar Bilal al-Banna s mother Yasmeen describes her children on Instagram...

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... After practising The Candle exercise every night for years, Bux realised at the age of 24 that if he shut his eyes and concentrated fiercely on something, " I can see vaguely, dimly, the outline of the object I am looking at"...

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... Then we go home, we have sandwiches and cake with a candle on it and the kids blow The Candle out...

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... I said to my husband Oh my God, it is in The Candle, I have binned The Candle , she added...

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... The Candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long has never rung more true to the family and friends Angelo had across the world...

Crossing Divides: The friends who are good for your brain

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... The Candle problemIn a one group of participants was asked to think of someone who conformed to stereotypes - such as a female midwife...

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Feb 16,2020 3:24 am

Creative thinking is essential for everything from solving problems to personal fulfilment. So, how can we do more to nurture it?

Every Day we are expected to make hundreds of decisions and judgements.

These range from small ones, like what to have for breakfast, to big ones like whether to take a new job.

The trouble is that our mental resources are limited - the human mind can only cope with so many things.

Given this huge challenge, we adopt mental shortcuts to function effectively. It is an approach which gets us through life, but which can also limit our growth as people.

Something as simple as thinking about the people we have around us can do a lot to change that and can even help us become more creative.

101 uses for a spoon

It may seem like an odd question, but what is a spoon for?

Your automatic assumption might well be that it is for stirring a cup of tea, or for eating cereal.

We do not tend to think about the many other uses a spoon could have. What about using it to dig a hole, wedge a door open, or catapult peas across the table?

The idea we reach first is a mental shortcut: it requires no thought and comes to mind without effort. It is a stereotype of the reasons for which we use a spoon.

This is an example of heuristic thinking, or what many people would refer to as a gut feeling.

Nevertheless, in which we can think more creatively - Breaking Away from the many such automatic thoughts we have

BBC Crossing Divides

A season of stories about bringing people Together in a fragmented world.

One is by opening ourselves up to greater social diversity - in other words, doing things like mixing with, or listening to, people who are not "just like us".

There are many ways in which we differ from each other: age, race, education, home town and so on.

Being asked to interact with someone from a different culture or background requires us to take a leap outside our comfort zones. Even just imagining doing this can have an effect.

Put differently, diversity gives The Brain a powerful workout. And, just like a physical workout, it can be incredibly good for us.

Beyond the obvious

However, we know that "Birds of a feather flock Together ". - in terms of values, preferences, and Personality Traits .

Breaking with these habits helps us challenge the heuristic-based thinking that shapes our automatic thoughts.

Birds of a feather flock Together

When people are exposed to a more diverse group of people, their brains are forced to process complex and unexpected information.

The more people do this, the better they become at producing complex and unexpected information themselves.

This trains us to look more readily look beyond the obvious - precisely the hallmark of creative thinking.

The Candle problem

In a one group of participants was asked to think of someone who conformed to stereotypes - such as a female midwife.

The Other group was asked to think of someone who did not - for example, a male childminder.

How do you attach a candle to a wall with only a box of matches and drawing pins?

We then measured the effect on creativity by asking participants to produce original names for a new brand of pasta. They were given existing pasta names as examples.

Results showed that The Group asked to picture people who did not conform to stereotypes were more creative.

They relied less on the heuristic-based knowledge available in The Task - the example of brand names - and came up with better new ones. Anyone for a bowl of "fontegalli" or "squigllioni"?

Other research has explored.

The researchers used a puzzle called the Duncker candle problem.

Participants were shown a picture containing a candle, a box of matches, and a box of pins.

The Task was to figure out, using only the objects on the table, How To attach The Candle to The Wall so that The Candle burns properly and does not drip wax on The Floor .

The correct solution involved using The Box of pins as a candleholder.

This task requires participants to ignore their pre-existing associations and see objects as performing different functions from what is typical.

The results showed that an experience of living abroad enhanced performance on this creativity task.

A new perspective

Of course, most of us will not be improving our creativity by thinking about spoons, pasta names, or attaching candles to a wall.

But there are many other things that can help us.

Engaging with diversity could include anything from watching foreign films to reading books about someone from a different background.

It could mean making new friends through volunteering with a group that includes people of all ages, or joining a sports club that involves people from other cultures.

Researchers have also found that creating and see things from a new perspective, by putting ourselves in a character's shoes.

They can also create and

Opening ourselves to new experiences can seem hard to do, but it can help us cross divides and nurture new and inclusive friendships.

In these Challenging Times for social cohesion, there may be real benefits of embracing the new and The Unexpected .

In doing so, we may not only be helping Our Own personal growth, but putting ourselves in The Best possible position to help solve society's enduring problems.

About this piece

This analysis piece was.

is assistant professor in The Department of Psychology at Durham University . Follow her

is head of The Department of Psychology at Durham University . Follow him

Edited by Duncan Walker



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Source of news: bbc.com

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