"The need to be right all the time is the biggest bar to new ideas"
About this Quote
Certainty feels like competence, which is exactly why it becomes such a powerful saboteur. Edward de Bono, the psychologist who made a career out of packaging creativity as a learnable skill, aims this line at a familiar modern disease: the reflex to treat thinking as a courtroom where every sentence is either guilty or innocent. If you “need to be right,” you stop exploring and start litigating. Ideas become positions, and positions demand defense. That posture doesn’t just slow innovation; it quietly rewires the room’s incentives so that the safest move is to sound correct, not to be curious.
De Bono’s intent is practical, almost managerial: he’s arguing for a shift from judgment to generation. His subtext is sharper. Being “right all the time” isn’t confidence; it’s status maintenance. It’s the ego’s version of risk management, and it punishes the very behaviors new ideas require: partial thoughts, awkward drafts, wrong turns, and speculative leaps that can’t be immediately justified. In many workplaces and public forums, “right” functions as social currency. Spend it on experimentation and you might look foolish. Hoard it and you look smart, until nothing new happens.
Context matters: de Bono’s “lateral thinking” emerged in a 20th-century culture obsessed with IQ, expertise, and linear logic as markers of authority. He’s not anti-reason; he’s anti-orthodoxy. The line works because it names the hidden trade: when identity fuses with correctness, creativity becomes an existential threat.
De Bono’s intent is practical, almost managerial: he’s arguing for a shift from judgment to generation. His subtext is sharper. Being “right all the time” isn’t confidence; it’s status maintenance. It’s the ego’s version of risk management, and it punishes the very behaviors new ideas require: partial thoughts, awkward drafts, wrong turns, and speculative leaps that can’t be immediately justified. In many workplaces and public forums, “right” functions as social currency. Spend it on experimentation and you might look foolish. Hoard it and you look smart, until nothing new happens.
Context matters: de Bono’s “lateral thinking” emerged in a 20th-century culture obsessed with IQ, expertise, and linear logic as markers of authority. He’s not anti-reason; he’s anti-orthodoxy. The line works because it names the hidden trade: when identity fuses with correctness, creativity becomes an existential threat.
Quote Details
| Topic | Embrace Change |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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