Inside the Box
How Constraints Make Us Better
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- Prenotazione
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- Uscita prevista: 7 mag 2026
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- 9,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
‘Masterful’ – Adam Grant, bestselling author of Think Again
‘Wonderful’ – Angela Duckworth, bestselling author of Grit
How to do more with less and use limits to stimulate creativity, innovation and collaboration, from the Sunday Times bestselling author of Range.
We live in a world that reveres limitless possibilities. We are constantly told to keep our options open and to ‘think outside the box’. But what if this is wrong? In Inside the Box, award-winning author David Epstein reveals why we actually need less freedom, not more.
History shows us that boundaries breed brilliance:
Dr Seuss revolutionised children’s literature only after accepting a bet to write an entire book using just fifty words.
Keith Jarrett arrived to play a sold-out gig only to find a substandard, out-of-tune piano with sticky keys and broken pedals. Forced to improvise around the damage, the jazz pianist produced the bestselling solo piano album of all time.The periodic table wasn’t born from a sudden spark of boundless genius, but from a simple, strict deadline for a publisher’s textbook.
General Magic – a tech startup with unlimited resources and unparalleled talent – failed spectacularly.
The common element in all these examples is the same: constraints do not stifle our creativity – they provide the exact impetus we need to harness it.
Weaving together gripping storytelling and cutting-edge cognitive science, Inside the Box proves that the secret to expanding our human potential isn’t finding more options – it’s choosing the right limits. Whether you are building a business, looking for a creative spark, or simply navigating the dizziness of modern life, this is a captivating guide to thriving in a fast-moving world.
An essential read to help you become the most creative, productive, and satisfied version of yourself.
‘David Epstein's first two books – The Sports Gene and Range – were brilliant, but Inside the Box is his best . . . I won't think about my own work the same way ever again’ – Malcolm Gladwell, bestselling author of Outliers and The Tipping Point
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Total freedom... is the enemy of creativity, and constraint its companion," asserts journalist Epstein (Range) in this counterintuitive and groundbreaking exploration. While individuals and organizations often yearn for more freedom, time, and money, Epstein explains that because the human brain is inclined to default to familiar patterns rather than engage in high-effort thinking, complete freedom leads to unoriginal ideas. Constraints, however, "push the brain beyond its default tendencies, forcing it to engage in deeper problem-solving." He draws on research and historical examples, including the story of Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami's breakthrough. Frustrated with his early, unoriginal attempts at writing, Murakami imposed a constraint on himself and wrote in his limited English, which he then translated to Japanese. The result was a simple and effective style that Murakami called "a creative rhythm distinctively my own." Elsewhere, Epstein explains that the idea that creativity is synonymous with originality is a product of the Romantic period. Before that, creativity was associated with improving on something that already existed. Shakespeare, for example, based classics like Romeo and Juliet and King Lear on prior works by other writers. Through captivating case studies, Epstein reveals the transformative power of obstacles. It's a game changer.