Good ideas inspire those around you to start growing on their own.
Good ideas Stimulate the people around you and start growing on your own.
Metaphor for [vegetative growth
Pulling does not grow, create an environment and wait.
↔ promotion
Stimulate the people around you
kindle a fire in one's heart
o3.icon
Related Historical Words
Emile Souvestre (preceded by Hugo) "There is something stronger than strength, courage, or talent. It is "an idea whose time has come."
1848 "Revue des Deux Mondes". The source of the later proverb "Time has come".
Victor Hugo "You can resist an invading army, but you cannot resist an invading idea."
In 1877, in "A History of Certain Crimes," in his criticism of the coup d'etat, he stated.
Autonomous diffusivity
Hugo/Souvestre pointed out the unstoppable invasiveness of ideas in the "military power < ideas" diagram.
Karl Marx "The moment theory captures the masses, it turns into material force."
Draft of "German Ideology," 1845-46. Emphasizes the shift from ideology to action.
mass mobilization.
Marx theorized that ideas change reality by "gripping the masses.
J. M. Keynes "The ideas of economists and philosophers - right or wrong - are more powerful than they seem. In fact, the world runs almost entirely on them."
Preface to The General Theory, 1936. Ideas as the "invisible hand" that drives policy making.
Impact on Institutional Formation
Keynes asserted that "ideas move the world," and he extends his scope to policy and economic practice.
G. B. Shaw "If you swap apples, you get one apple, but if you swap ideas, you get two."
Remarks attributed to a speech given in the early 1900s. Suggested a multiplier effect of sharing.
Multiplier effect of sharing
The show is a metaphor for the doubling of value through "exchange" and shows how collaboration fosters ideas.
Richard Dawkins ""meme" is a new replicator that evolves by self-replicating culture through imitation."
1976, The Selfish Gene. A Self-Propagating Model of Ideas.
evolutionary perspective
In his meme theory, Dawkins proposed the "self-growth" process of imitation, mutation, and selection as a scientific metaphor.
These are all discourses that capture the phenomenon of "good ideas stimulating their surroundings and developing in a self-perpetuating manner," transcending differences in time and position.
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Keep pushing the rock.] Keep pushing the rock. Perseverance even if no one appreciates.
The power to get things done.
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