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الأفكار هي عملتك الوحيدة : 100 مشروع إبداعي لفتح ذهنك وإثارة أفكار عظيمة

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المهارات تصبح بالية في اللحظة التي تكتسبها فيها، فالمعرفة يتم تجاوزها على الفور. إذا كنت تريد تحصين نفسك من المستقبل، يتعين لك أن تصبح شخصاً صاحب أفكار: قابلاً للتكيف، ومنفتح الذهن، ومتمرساً في حل المشكلات. يتعين أن تكون متواصلاً، ومخترعاً، وفناناً، ومؤدياً.

الرياضي الأوليمبي يدرب جسده. ويجب على الشخص الإبداعي أن يدرب مخيلته. والتمريناتالموجودة في هذة الصفحات سوف تجعل عقلك لأئقاً ورشيقاً بما يكفي لكي مولداً للأفكار ولكي ينمي قدرتك التخيلية وإمكاناتك الإبداعية مهما كانت خبرتك أو مهنتك.
فكر أبعد مما هو مقبول وتقليدي.

233 pages, Paperback

First published January 26, 2017

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478 people want to read

About the author

Rod Judkins

30 books185 followers
I have written five books on the subject of creativity and innovation. My latest book is 'Make Brilliant Work'.

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Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for Kristiana Cankowa.
309 reviews55 followers
May 2, 2020
Като цяло не съм човек който обича да чете книги на тази тематика за Самопознание, Самопомощ и т.н. Опитвала съм се на един-два пъти и нещата не се получаваха. Но както всяко нещо и тук се оказа че си има изключение от правилото, тази книга дойде при мен, благодарение на издателство Жануа '98 и прекрасния жест, който направиха.

Във нея ще намерим 100 задачи които ни подтикват към творческата и креативна страна която мисля че всеки един от нас притежава. Разликата според мен е че тези страни при някои са доста по-развити отколкото при други. Сега аз съм от тези които искат, но не им се отдава да рисуват.

Книгата е разделена на 10 части и обхваща както нещата които ни заобикалят, така й различни аспекти от същността на човека.
Например:
𝟙. Слуга ли си на инструментите си?
𝟚. Надбягващ ли се с времето?
𝟛. Държиш ли живота си в ръце?
𝟜. Ти- ти ли си?
𝟝. Объркан ли си?
и други.

Това са само част от въпросите зададени в книгата и има още толкова които наистина те карат да се замислиш над тях. Карат те да се замислиш къде се намираш в живота си, правиш ли това което те радва и прави щастлив и какво още можеш да надградиш и постигнеш.
Във всяка една от тези категории има и по 10 въпроса, които са придружени със задачи. Те са най-различни, например да си се представим като бутилка и какъв би бил етикета ни, да проектираме нов вид валута, да помислим над това коя част от себе си бихме дарили на музей и т.н. Определено имаше и още и още интересни задачи за правене и изискващи креативността ни. Лично аз не направих нито една от тях, но както казах, аз нямам таланта да рисувам и другата причина е че по-принцип аз не обичам да драскам по книгите си.

Лично аз не успях да си изпробвам креативността, заради горе посочените причини, но искам да ви кажа че се оказа интересна и полезна за мен. Информацията и интересните факти които са поместени вътре ми бяха много интересни и определено научих доста нови неща за неща от най-различни сфери от живота. Другото което много ми хареса е големият набор от цитати, бих ги описала само с една дума - МОТИВИРАЩИ!
Ако и вие искате да научите интересни факти и информация за най-различни неща, обичате да си вадите цитати или пък искате да се мотивирате и изпитате креативността си, аз ви предлагам точно тази книга. Щом може да задържи вниманието и да удовлетвори любопитството и на човек който не умее да рисува, за мен това значи че тази книга определено си заслужава.
Тази книга не ви казва как да живеете и не ви дава акъл, ако мога така да се изразя. Тя просто ви задава въпроси и ви кара са се замислите, за това което сте постигнали до тук и че всъщност можем да постигнем всичко което поискаме от себе си.

"Техническите нововъведения ни връхлитат и могат да ни прегазят като валяк. Ако не сме част от валяка, ставаме част от пътя." - Стюарт Бранд

"Успехът се състои в това да преминаваш от един провал към друг, без да губиш ентусиазъм." - Уинстън Чърчил

"Времето е най-ценният подарък. Отделяйки време за някого, Вие му дарявате част от живота си, която никога няма да си върнете обратно." - Глория Теш

"Да се оттегля в някое кафене с тетрадка, да пиша и да се оставя на въображението ми да ме води - това е представата ми за блаженство." - Джоан Роулинг

"Постоянно се опитваш. Постоянно се проваляш. Нищо. Опитай пак. Провали се пак. Провали се по-добре." - Самюъл Бекет

"Библиотеката на един човек ще Ви каже всичко, което Ви е нужно да знаете за него." - Уолтър Мозли

"Хората не осъзнават как една книга може да промени целия им живот." - Малкълм Екс

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Благодаря Ви, за отделеното време!!!
Profile Image for Tina.
599 reviews35 followers
April 30, 2019
I found the exercises were too narrow in their ideas to assist creativity, if anything it stunted it slightly as the exercises were too much like copy-writing tasks and advertising. If you want to develop creativity you need to give exercises which gives the mind a broader scope to play with.
Profile Image for Corey.
209 reviews9 followers
April 30, 2018
Summary:
This book was a good break from the written word. The majority of the book is for you to fill in as you are presented with a series of thought provoking exercises to get your creative juices flowing. This is preceded by a brief introduction to the author and the purpose of the book. I found this refreshing, but challenging. I find it easy to define ideas by writing words, not drawing pictures. I am a very poor visual artist, but this was good practice in refining that and a great way to draw out ideas and just get lost in the creative process. It feels more like a work book than anything else, but the reason for this design is very apt. The author poses that in an ever changing world, the only way to stay relevant is to be an ideas person that is flexible and adaptable to change. By the time you learn a new skill, it's already outdated, but your ability to make something from nothing and address new stimulus is invaluable.

I would recommend this book to anyone with a creative bone in their body, particularly visual artists. This book feels like a 3.5 to me, but I'll give it 4 stars because I think people who are good at drawing will get that much value out of it.

The main message I took from this book is that ideas are a limitless currency generated within that can add monetary value, but have worth beyond this as they permeate throughout society. To stay relevant, be an ideas person.

Three notable points:
- Ideas enrich the world, they have worth beyond monetary value, but are still a currency.

- Ideas are a medium of exchange circulating throughout the culture and opening up opportunities. Their circulation creates both incremental and massive change in the world.

- Conceptual design thinking is ultimately about the search for meaning.
Profile Image for Jung.
1,939 reviews45 followers
Read
May 23, 2025
In "Ideas Are Your Only Currency", Rod Judkins presents a powerful call to action for those navigating the chaos of the modern world: develop your creativity, or risk becoming obsolete. In an era where change accelerates at a breakneck pace, the ability to think originally and flexibly is more valuable than any fixed skill set or accumulated knowledge. Drawing on historical and contemporary examples, Judkins argues that creative thinking is the only reliable tool we have to meet the unknown future. Through 100 provocative and imaginative exercises, the book encourages readers to train their minds to explore, question, invent, and transform the world around them. Each challenge is crafted to strengthen mental agility and deepen one’s capacity for original thought.

Judkins opens by placing creativity in historical context, comparing the disruptive impact of Gutenberg’s printing press in the 15th century to the technological revolutions of today. While society once had centuries to absorb innovation, the modern world moves so quickly that adaptation must happen almost instantaneously. This fundamental shift renders many traditional forms of education and expertise obsolete. In such a volatile landscape, Judkins asserts, creativity is the only skill that doesn’t expire. Knowledge fades and job skills become outdated, but the ability to come up with new ideas retains its power. He emphasizes that individuals must stop relying solely on what they know and instead cultivate a mindset capable of generating insight and solutions when circumstances change.

One of the first themes Judkins explores is our relationship with technology. He challenges readers not just to use technology, but to examine and reshape it critically. In a world where devices influence behavior and perception as much as they serve us, Judkins invites readers to flip the script: design technology with personality, critique its downsides, and repurpose historical ideas to inspire modern design. One exercise asks you to invent a cheese grater inspired by your personal design obsessions; another invites you to imagine a symbolic coat of arms for a modern figure like Bill Gates. These prompts push the reader to blend function with narrative, and to explore how technological tools can reflect human stories rather than override them.

Time, one of our most limited and poorly understood resources, is another subject Judkins approaches with creative verve. Drawing inspiration from Einstein’s theory of relativity and the philosophical nature of infinity, he asks readers to reimagine their perceptions of time itself. What if we could redesign the symbol of infinity to reflect its awe-inspiring essence? What would a compelling book cover for relativity look like if it captured the concept’s thrilling implications? He even takes on death as a creative canvas, encouraging readers to envision how their remains could be transformed into a meaningful final act—like fireworks, ink, or something else entirely. Through these exercises, time becomes less a limitation and more an open space for imaginative exploration.

Binary thinking—rigid opposites like good and bad, East and West, success and failure—is a pattern Judkins critiques as fundamentally limiting. Creativity, he suggests, thrives in complexity, contradiction, and ambiguity. To combat polarized thinking, he offers exercises like designing a hybrid animal from a hamster base, building a city without straight lines, or designing a culturally symbolic bridge between continents. These prompts challenge the reader to blur the lines that typically divide concepts and instead explore what lies in between. By creating creatures, cities, and bridges that exist outside standard categories, the reader is asked to rethink the frameworks that shape their everyday reasoning.

The future, in Judkins’ view, is not a fixed destination but a space to be constructed. Rather than passively waiting for progress to happen, readers are encouraged to invent it. One particularly striking challenge is to design a nuclear waste site that can communicate danger to people 10,000 years in the future—a time span beyond any current cultural continuity. Others involve reimagining outdated objects like floppy disks for new uses or envisioning how the people of 2124 might dream about their own future in 2224. These tasks demand long-range thinking, cross-disciplinary creativity, and an understanding of the interplay between culture and technology. The exercises make it clear that the future isn’t a place we discover; it’s something we shape with our actions and imagination today.

Another critical theme Judkins addresses is the illusion of reality. Many of our beliefs and values are not truths but cultural constructions that feel natural because we rarely question them. Through exercises like designing a perception-altering pill, a zombie cure kit, or a machine that filters reality, Judkins helps readers examine their own mental programming. What might happen if we could suddenly see the environmental impact of every item we touch? Or if we could remove status symbols from our view and focus only on function? These exercises aim to wake readers from passive conformity and encourage them to interrogate the 'normal' realities they participate in without thought.

The book concludes with a meditation on value itself. In a world obsessed with financial metrics, Judkins argues that true value lies in how we frame, perceive, and relate to things. Whether designing a currency that reflects a nation’s real values, creating an award that honors failure, or turning a cheap plastic item into something of symbolic worth, readers are asked to subvert traditional systems of meaning. These exercises not only challenge consumerist assumptions but also emphasize that we have the power to determine what matters—and to change those definitions as needed. By encouraging readers to shift their perspectives on money, success, and worth, Judkins empowers them to become meaning-makers rather than meaning-followers.

Overall, "Ideas Are Your Only Currency" is not merely a book of creative prompts—it’s a manifesto for thinking differently in a world that desperately needs it. Rod Judkins makes a persuasive case that imagination is not a luxury, but a survival skill. By presenting creativity as something that can be trained and sharpened, he removes it from the realm of mysticism and places it squarely in the reader’s hands. The exercises he provides are not only entertaining and challenging but also serve as tools for intellectual independence and cultural critique. In an age when machines are increasingly taking over mechanical tasks, it’s the human capacity to dream, disrupt, and reimagine that will remain irreplaceable. Creativity, Judkins insists, is the last true form of currency—and it’s time we learned how to spend it well.

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Here are the 100 imaginative and thought-provoking creative project ideas in the book “Ideas Are Your Only Currency” by Rod Judkins:

Creative Thinking & Perspective
1. Write a story from the perspective of an inanimate object in your room.
2. Design a museum exhibit for your thoughts.
3. Describe your life if gravity worked in reverse.
4. Write a love letter to a bad idea.
5. Make a list of 10 things you believe that most people don’t.
6. Redesign the concept of “time.”
7. Invent a new color and describe how it makes people feel.
8. Create a map of your imagination.
9. Build a calendar for emotions instead of days.
10. Write instructions for how to think backwards.

Inventive Design & Object Reimagining
11. Design a product that solves a problem no one thinks is a problem.
12. Create a new kind of currency based on kindness.
13. Invent a piece of clothing that changes based on your mood.
14. Design a house for someone who lives in their dreams.
15. Draw a phone with no screen.
16. Reimagine a spoon as a musical instrument.
17. Create a chair for someone who never sits still.
18. Redesign the umbrella for a world with sideways rain.
19. Invent a “silent” alarm clock.
20. Design a mirror that tells the truth.

Culture & Society
21. Write new rules for a society where lying is mandatory.
22. Create a job title that doesn’t exist yet.
23. Imagine a law that makes creativity compulsory.
24. Build a world where art is currency.
25. Develop a school curriculum based on curiosity, not subjects.
26. Create a new holiday and explain how it’s celebrated.
27. Imagine a social media platform that bans compliments.
28. Re-invent democracy with no voting.
29. Design a new form of government based on animals.
30. Create a tradition for a culture that values boredom.

Writing & Language Play
31. Make a dictionary of made-up words.
32. Write a poem using only questions.
33. Create an autobiography in six objects.
34. Rewrite a classic fairytale in a modern corporate setting.
35. Tell a story where every sentence starts with the letter “S.”
36. Write a breakup letter to your past self.
37. Construct a script for a conversation between two emotions.
38. Create a language with only sounds, no words.
39. Design a font that expresses anger.
40. Write a recipe for a feeling.

Perception & Observation
41. Take 10 photos of shadows and describe their personalities.
42. Close your eyes and draw what you hear.
43. Spend 10 minutes describing the space between two objects.
44. Write down everything blue you see in a day.
45. Look at a stranger and write their backstory.
46. Describe a place using only smells.
47. List 5 things in your environment that people always overlook.
48. Imagine how your city looks to a child.
49. Make a sculpture using only trash.
50. Write a diary entry for your pet.

Mind-Bending Challenges
51. Argue against your favorite belief.
52. Try to unlearn something you know.
53. Create an ad campaign for silence.
54. Design a box that can’t contain anything.
55. Write a list of impossible questions.
56. Think of 5 ways to break a rule without consequences.
57. Turn a fear into a superhero.
58. Create a board game with no winners.
59. Imagine if humans were nocturnal.
60. Describe the color red to someone who has never seen.

Art & Aesthetics
61. Paint a song.
62. Create an art piece that must be destroyed after one hour.
63. Make a collage using only food wrappers.
64. Design a building based on a feeling.
65. Create a self-portrait using only metaphors.
66. Build a sculpture from kitchen tools.
67. Draw your thoughts before sleeping.
68. Create a tattoo for an idea, not a person.
69. Design wallpaper that changes with the season.
70. Make art with something you've never used before.

Social & Emotional Intelligence
71. Write a thank-you note to your anxiety.
72. Make a “user manual” for yourself.
73. Create a friendship contract.
74. Design a journal for someone you admire.
75. Write a letter you’ll never send.
76. Invent a game to play during arguments.
77. Imagine your emotions as characters at a dinner party.
78. Create a care package for someone who feels invisible.
79. Describe your personality using animals.
80. Build a guidebook for empathy.

Imagination Expansion
81. If clouds had memories, what would they remember?
82. Describe your dream job in a parallel universe.
83. Write a survival guide for Mars… written by a tree.
84. Design a zoo for extinct ideas.
85. Create a diary for a robot gaining consciousness.
86. Build a religion with no gods.
87. Create a TV show about time-traveling chefs.
88. Write rules for a club of invisible people.
89. Invent a weather forecast for emotions.
90. Describe a utopia run by artists.

Actionable & Daily Practice
91. Do something creative using only your non-dominant hand.
92. Carry a notebook and record one strange idea a day.
93. Spend 5 minutes a day imagining a new invention.
94. Try explaining a big idea to a child.
95. Keep a “what if?” journal.
96. Re-create a dream using clay, paper, or paint.
97. Build something using no tools.
98. Design your own creative ritual.
99. Write a list of “rules” you’ll break this week.
100. Teach something you don’t fully understand.
Profile Image for Dil Nawaz.
323 reviews17 followers
September 12, 2022
Ideas are your only currency Review

About author:

Rod Judkins is a skilled lecturer at Central St Martin's, one of the foremost art schools in the world whose graduates, including designers Stella McCartney and Alexander McQueen, have had a significant impact on our culture. Judkins has given lectures on the topic of creativity to corporations and academic institutions all over the world. He writes a blog for Psychology Today and provides consulting services to many private businesses. He received his art training at The Royal College of Art, and he has shown his work at the Tate Britain, National Portrait Gallery, and Royal Academy, among other venues.

What competencies will a student require to succeed in five, 10, or fifteen years?

Ideas endure in a world of constant change when abilities soon become obsolete.

We must all be equipped to survive in a complex, interconnected world. Specialization lines will converge and overlap. The pace of change is electrifying. There are no maps in this vortex.

This book is a practical way how to generate ideas quickly for different projects. The majority of exercises are worthy except a few. If you are a designer or in the design thinking field must try. By the way, anyone can read this to boost their creativity.

Recommended
Dil Nawaz
Founder of The Lion Studios
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25 reviews
May 5, 2019
I picked this up in a rush purely on the title. I work as a creative so it piqued my interest. However, was disappointed when I eventually opened it. It seems to be aimed at teaching people to be more creative and I assumed it was actually discussing 100 creative ideas. The front page says '100 creative projects to open your mind and inspire great ideas'. It should say '100 creative exercises for those that struggle'. It seemed really childish to me, it almost seems unfair to say that because I think all creativity is valid.
Profile Image for Sarah Cupitt.
839 reviews47 followers
May 22, 2025
design read - interesting

notes:
- Are you excited by the future or apprehensive? Either way, you’re going to end up there. And the best way to take control is to shape it rather than being shaped by it.
- What once took generations to absorb now demands immediate adaptation. This rapid pace leaves no buffer zone between the new and the now.
- you can’t future-proof your career with certainty anymore. Your best asset isn’t what you know. It’s your ability to create fresh ideas when everything else shifts beneath your feet.
- You need to become an ideas person, someone who generates solutions when others only see problems.
- humans have always made technology. But it’s a reciprocal relationship: technology also makes us. It shapes our behaviors, thought patterns, and social structures. The technologies we use aren’t just neutral tools. They actively shape the content they deliver and how we perceive it.
- Too many of us have become addicted to technology without engaging with it critically. We’ve become tools of our technology rather than making technology our tools.
- While you can’t get more time than you’re allotted, you can change how you work with it.

exercises:
- think about what your top three design influences are. Perhaps they’re art deco architecture, underwater creatures, and vintage maps. Now, think about how you might incorporate these elements to design a unique cheese grater.
- Historical formats can inspire fresh innovation. Consider how e-readers mimic the form of physical books while adding new functionality.
- Does technology control us rather than serve us? Throughout history, humans have resisted technology’s encroachment with mixed results. What technology disturbs you today, and why? Design a protest placard that effectively communicates your concerns. Perhaps it’s facial recognition, algorithmic news feeds, or surveillance advertising. How might you visually capture the essence of your critique?
- Design a book cover for Einstein’s theory of relativity that properly conveys how thrilling it truly is. Make it exciting, accessible, and true to the concept’s world-changing significance.
- Design a new logo for infinity. What should endlessness look like?
- devise your own inventive way to handle your remains that reflects who you are and what matters to you. This final creative act could be poignant, playful, or purposeful – but make it authentically yours.
- design your own hybrid creature, starting with a hamster as your foundation. What unexpected organism might you combine it with? Consider what problems your hybrid might solve, or what new perspectives it might offer. Sketch it out, name it, and describe its unique characteristics and behaviors.
- Break the rules and design a city that resists straight lines and enhances human connection. How might buildings curve to create natural gathering spaces? Could pathways meander like rivers rather than forming grid systems? Sketch your vision of a flowing, connection-oriented cityscape that defies the tyranny of the straight line.
- How will your visual language represent both Eastern and Western cultural elements? Consider how your design could symbolize cultural connection rather than division.
- Design a pill that can change one thing about yourself. Not physically, but perceptually. What single shift in perspective would transform how you experience the world? Perhaps it’s a pill that removes cultural conditioning around beauty standards, or one that lets you see electromagnetic fields normally invisible to humans.
- You are surrounded by zombies: people who do nothing but sleep, eat, commute, work, commute, watch television, sleep again. Their lives follow predictable patterns within systems they rarely question. Design a “zombie cure kit” intended to snap them out of this automated reality.
- Design a machine that can filter out one aspect of consensual reality and replace it with something else. Would your machine remove advertising from visual perception? Replace status symbols with indicators of actual utility? Make visible the environmental impact of everyday objects?
- Design an award that celebrates failure. What would it look like? Who would receive it?
Profile Image for Serhat.
103 reviews2 followers
November 10, 2022
tam olarak geleneksel bir formata uymayan bir kitap. yazarın, okuyucuya yaratıcılığı tetikleyen bazı görevler verdiği ve öncesinde de o görevle alakalı kısa birer anektod paylaştığı atölye çalışması gibi bir formatı var. hem format olarak tuhaf hem de içerik olarak tatmin edici değil. içerikle alakalı problem, temelde çok sınırlı bir bilgi sunması. kitabın başlı başına katma değerli bir ürün olduğunu düşünmek istiyorum ve bu katma değeri sağlayan şeyin %90’ı içerdiği bilgi olmalıdır, baskı ve grafik sonra gelir. maalesef şekle çok değer atfedilerek, twitter’da yapılan boş flood’lar gibi bir içerik ortaya konmuş.

kitabın ana fikrinin bilgi olmadığının farkındayım, daha çok okurun kafasında şimşekler çaktırmanın peşinde… ama zaten iyi yazılmış ve anlamlı bir metin okuyup da bu noktaya gelebiliriz.
Profile Image for Nick Munene.
90 reviews6 followers
May 7, 2023
3.0

The blurb oversells the book's contents; I expected more complex ideas or exercises to challenge me. Because of this, this book felt like it was meant for a younger audience. With this in mind, it'd make an excellent gift for pre-teens, teens and young adults just starting out in life.

What I liked most was how easy it was to get through the pages while still taking all the nuggets of inspiration in. Like many similar books in this genre, this was a good book but wasn't necessarily bubbling with awe and luminance.
Profile Image for Dee.
21 reviews
May 22, 2025
Really interesting exercises to get you to think outside of your comfort zone a little, or outside of the box. I liked it. Some nice links to mainly sociological and some psychological concepts without being too specific and ‘teachy’. As a humanities student I was able to see the connections between tne content snd what I have been reading at uni. It gave me a break from heavy study snd was an enjoyable fun way to spend some study breaks.
Profile Image for Synthia Salomon.
1,225 reviews21 followers
May 22, 2025
“creative thinking is the essential skill for adapting to rapid technological change and maintaining career relevance. Exercises that challenge binary thinking, reimagine everyday concepts, and question perceived reality help develop innovative problem-solving abilities. By designing speculative solutions to complex problems and redefining value systems, you can shape the future rather than being passively shaped by it.”
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for An-Nisa Nur'aini.
152 reviews37 followers
September 30, 2018
I'm intrigued by what Judkins said in one of the chapters/ideas, that:

"Our culture doesn’t need any more firemen to put out fires, it needs firestarters to ignite metaphorical blazes, fire new ideas at people, throw light on reality, create heated debates, spark curiosity and create burning desires."

- indeed.
Profile Image for Χρύσα Γιαννοπούλου.
60 reviews12 followers
April 6, 2023
Computers and skills have a sell-by date.
But ideas have no boundaries.
Our minds are used to limited procedures of thinking.
How about changing that , if we want to change each and every thing around us?
Design needs a spark of unusual kind of thinking and finishing that book might be a chance to a new beginning.
Profile Image for Gaylin.
22 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2020
These creative projects do open minds and inspire greater ideas. I use them in workshops with teams, and we reflect on how the teams work together after they've enjoyed working on their own creative project.
Profile Image for Osama Gharieb.
Author 4 books82 followers
July 7, 2023
الخطر الحقيقي ليس أن الحواسيب ستبدأ في التفكير والبشر، وإنما أن البشر سيبدأون في التفكير كالحواسيب. سيدني جيه. هاريس
في ظل الرأسمالية يستغل الإنسان أخاه الإنسان. وفي ظل الشيوعية يحدث العكس بالضبط . جون طينيث جالبرايت

كتاب ممتع يحرض على الإبداع
Profile Image for Siti.
290 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2020
Good ideas and provoking thoughts in the book. Not the ideal type of paper to draw on though
Profile Image for Saida Murad.
49 reviews4 followers
December 13, 2020
if you want to play mind games, and create some creative pictures then you should read it. Also, you can find lots of wise words in this book.
Profile Image for Hamad Al Hammadi.
23 reviews1 follower
December 13, 2020
الكتاب يعتمد على التمارين لشحذ تفكيرك و تنمية مهاراتك في الابداع
كنت اتوقع مناقشة لطرق التفكير وعموماً لا افضل كتب التمارين
Profile Image for Kira :).
83 reviews
May 17, 2025
2.5 ⭐
more of a book of doodles than anything else
Profile Image for Steve.
78 reviews6 followers
June 5, 2025
Solid guide to increase your chances of thriving in an ever-changing world.
29 reviews
December 27, 2017
Absolutely amazing, you must read. It helps you develop and open your mind immensely.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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