To appropriate an invention, be it artistic or technical, you have to have at least a part of your spirit embracing it so radically that you somehow change.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Our ability to create has outreached our ability to use wisely the products of our invention.
An innovation is one of those things that society looks at and says, if we make this part of the way we live and work, it will change the way we live and work.
Innovation comes out of great human ingenuity and very personal passions.
Innovation comes to you from creators who do have a vision and a passion, and that is how we succeeded.
The innovative process is a fragile one, dependent on a complex, often messy interplay of imagination, competition, and exchange. Curbing new ideas hurts not only individual creators but the audience for which they create and the posterity that inherits their legacy.
As creators, we feel constant demand for innovation from the world. This puts immense pressure on the creative process and oftentimes can have a dampening effect.
The important thing to remember, if you are trying something that is an innovation, is not to think too much about it. Because if you take too long, by the time you get there, the world will have changed. You take a risk, and if it doesn't work, you make a change. We are not betting our lives on it.
During my eighty-seven years I have witnessed a whole succession of technological revolutions. But none of them has done away with the need for character in the individual or the ability to think.
If you're a creative person, what inspires you is always changing; it's always shifting.
A spirit of innovation is generally the result of a selfish temper and confined views. People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward to their ancestors.