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Thinking outside the box (also thinking out of the box [1] [2] or thinking beyond the box and, especially in Australia, thinking outside the square [3]) is an idiom that means to think differently, unconventionally, or from a new perspective. The phrase also often refers to novel or creative thinking.
Lateral thinking is a manner of solving problems using an indirect and creative approach via reasoning that is not immediately obvious. Synonymous to thinking outside the box, it involves ideas that may not be obtainable using only traditional step-by-step logic. [1] The cutting of the Gordian Knot is a classical example.
To do so, one goes outside the confines of the square area defined by the nine dots themselves. The phrase thinking outside the box, used by management consultants in the 1970s and 1980s, is a restatement of the solution strategy. According to Daniel Kies, the puzzle seems hard because we commonly imagine a boundary around the edge of the dot ...
The candle problem or candle task, also known as Duncker's candle problem, is a cognitive performance test, measuring the influence of functional fixedness on a participant's problem solving capabilities. The test was created by Gestalt psychologist Karl Duncker [1] and published by him in 1935. [2]
Design teams typically begin with a structured brainstorming process of "thinking outside the box". Convergent thinking, on the other hand, aims for zooming and focusing on the different proposals to select the best choice, which permits continuation of the design thinking process to achieve the final goals.
This problem has produced the expression "think outside the box". [48] [page needed] Such problems are typically solved via a sudden insight which leaps over the mental barriers, often after long toil against them. [49]
Openness is a self-report of one’s preference for thinking "outside the box”. Divergent thinking tests represent a performance-based measure of such. While some studies have found no personality effects on convergent thinking, [5] large-scale meta-analyses have found numerous personality traits to be related to such reasoning abilities (e.g ...
I support the split. The phrase think outside the box is an idiom, whereas the nine dots puzzle is, well, a puzzle. While undoubtedly related, they are different enough to warrant separate articles. ISaveNewspapers 16:29, 12 March 2021 (UTC) Support – I think, as of 2022, both concepts are distinct enough to be separated. This follows most ...