Initially, new ideas are rejected. Later they become dogma if you're right. And if you're really lucky, you can publish your rejections as part of your Nobel presentation.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I never thought my ideas would actually get published.
There are 9 rejected ideas for every idea that works.
Too often new ideas are studied and analyzed until they are suffocated.
If the idea is really new and unique and big, other people will all think it is bad and is going to fail.
You have to work with the ideas and give them a little push.
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.
I have reached the point where I know that as long as I sit down to write, the ideas will come. What they will be, I don't know.
The hardest thing is the idea. Ideas come from somewhere but as far as we know they come from nowhere.
Don't let anyone tell you your ideas are stupid or the thing you feel most passionate about 'won't work' - it's happened to me time and time again, and we find that if you push at what you think is interesting hard enough, you're probably right.
There are no new ideas. There are only new ways of making them felt.