Skip to content
Sign up for Big Think on Substack
The most surprising and impactful new stories delivered to your inbox every week, for free.
  • Traditionally, intelligence has been viewed as having all the answers. When it comes to being innovative and forward-thinking, it turns out that being able to ask the right questions is an equally valuable skill.
  • The difference between the right and wrong questions is not simply in the level of difficulty. In this video, geobiologist Hope Jahren, journalist Warren Berger, experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats, and investor Tim Ferriss discuss the power of creativity and the merit in asking naive and even “dumb” questions.
  • “Very often the dumb question that is sitting right there that no one seems to be asking is the smartest question you can ask,” Ferriss says, adding that “not only is it the smartest, most incisive, but if you want to ask it and you’re reasonably smart, I guarantee you there are other people who want to ask it but are just embarrassed to do so.”

Related