In the midst of [Claude] Shannon's career, some lawyers in the patent department at Bell Labs decided to study whether there was an organizing principle that could explain why certain individuals at the Labs were more productive than others. They discerned only one common thread: Workers with the most patents often shared lunch or breakfast with a Bell Labs electrical engineer named Harry Nyquist. It wasn't the case that Nyquist gave them specific ideas. Rather, as one scientist recalled, 'he drew people out, got them thinking.' More than anything, Nyquist asked good questions.
Examining writing, arguments, communication, education, teaching, and ways of engaging with others.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Good Questions
Just a quote today.
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