Design Better

George Newman: Cognitive scientist on why creativity is more like archaeology than magic

31 snips
Feb 20, 2026
George Newman, a cognitive scientist and author of How Great Ideas Happen, describes creativity as discovery rather than magic. He outlines a four-step “creative archaeology” workflow and discusses hot streaks in creative careers. He also explores how intuition fits into structured practice and shares practical exercises for breaking creative ruts.
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INSIGHT

Creativity As Archaeological Discovery

  • Creativity resembles archaeology: ideas are discovered, not magically born in isolation.
  • George Newman frames creative work as systematic excavation through evidence and cognitive science.
INSIGHT

The Hot Streak Pattern

  • Many careers show "hot streaks" where exploration leads to a concentrated period of high-impact work.
  • Creators explore widely, hit a rich vein, mine it fully, then move on to the next phase.
ADVICE

Follow The Four-Stage Process

  • Use four stages: survey, grid, dig, and sift to structure creative work.
  • Treat gridding as defining constraints, digging as idea generation without judgment, and sifting as later evaluation.
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