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When Machines Ideate Better Than You: The Coming Crisis of Human Creative Identity
There is a version of the future that almost no one is talking about honestly. Not the dystopian one where AI takes your job - that conversation is already exhausting and largely beside the point. The more interesting, more quietly unsettling version is this: what happens to the human mind when the cognitive labour it has always used to define itself - imagining, connecting, inventing, speculating - becomes something a machine does faster, cheaper, and with less friction? Thi


Bisociation: The Forgotten Architecture of Creative Breakthroughs
Twenty years into teaching advanced English learners, I noticed something peculiar. Students who could articulate complex philosophical arguments would freeze when asked to connect two seemingly unrelated ideas. They had vocabulary, grammar, sophisticated reasoning – but lacked the cognitive architecture to leap between distant conceptual domains. This wasn't a language problem. It was a creativity problem. Arthur Koestler identified this gap in 1964. In The Act of Creation ,


Grandomastery Coaching: Training Humans for What Machines Cannot Do
Grandomastery coaching trains irreplaceable human cognitive abilities through forced serendipity and bisociative thinking. As AI handles routine tasks, this methodology develops what machines cannot replicate: tolerance for ambiguity, conceptual leaps across semantic distance, and synthesis of meaning from randomness. Through 70+ randomized activities, learners build creative autonomy, adaptive thinking, and integrative reasoning. It addresses cognitive deficits intensified b
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