(Q - ??: because when I talked about finding more or less a “Eureka” in his bath and suddenly I had more or less research which guided me on this point
actually.)
MB: Yeah, but what I mean is, the super solution is not a question of research, it's a question of cleverness and imagination, it's not through pure statistical or mathematical work that you can find the great solution, you need this famous… that’s why I like it, but it has nothing to do with it, but I like the image when we were talking about Tintin and Rackham’s Treasure the red one, when they have gone around the world to find the Treasure, they find themselves in the crypt of the Castle and all of a sudden, he presses the little button at the location of the mysterious island there , and CLAC the globe opens and the Treasure is inside.
I mean, it's something that no one would have ever thought of, that they come across, you could say a little by chance... it's not entirely by chance, because we You see, if we want to follow this example which is not uninteresting, in his head he recapitulates everything, he says well there you go, there you go, that means that it should be there. And at that moment, he puts his finger...so yes I was saying in fact, what is interesting is that if we relive the scene where Tintin actually puts his finger on the little point of the globe and where he opens the globe and discovers the Treasure, he is in the process of recapitulating, he is doing recapitulation work in his head, he reasons by saying, well, if we are logical this, that, something, that should, and the CLAC , he puts his finger on it, he puts his finger on it in parentheses, it can't be invented, he puts his finger on it. Well, that’s a bit like the story of the owl.
Except that simple reasoning will not allow you to put your finger on it, in addition to reasoning, you have to be able to imagine what I call this pirate trick, although Max said that there is no cliché pirate or whatever, from the moment we come across a trick which consists of saying to find the exact point where the countermark is buried, you have to show imagination, so you have to know something that allows you to …we are completely into tricks that I call pirate tricks. A little trick that allows you to find the precise point, by engaging in intellectual gymnastics and with cleverness, with the right find, et cetera.
So that's what we have to do but we're really on this point, we're still at a moment where it's not worth going for miles and doing dozens of holes , if your great solution can be modified, adapted, adapted, etc., it is not good. The real great solution, once you're on it, there is no possible way, it's this one and not any other.
MB: Yeah, but what I mean is, the super solution is not a question of research, it's a question of cleverness and imagination, it's not through pure statistical or mathematical work that you can find the great solution, you need this famous… that’s why I like it, but it has nothing to do with it, but I like the image when we were talking about Tintin and Rackham’s Treasure the red one, when they have gone around the world to find the Treasure, they find themselves in the crypt of the Castle and all of a sudden, he presses the little button at the location of the mysterious island there , and CLAC the globe opens and the Treasure is inside.
I mean, it's something that no one would have ever thought of, that they come across, you could say a little by chance... it's not entirely by chance, because we You see, if we want to follow this example which is not uninteresting, in his head he recapitulates everything, he says well there you go, there you go, that means that it should be there. And at that moment, he puts his finger...so yes I was saying in fact, what is interesting is that if we relive the scene where Tintin actually puts his finger on the little point of the globe and where he opens the globe and discovers the Treasure, he is in the process of recapitulating, he is doing recapitulation work in his head, he reasons by saying, well, if we are logical this, that, something, that should, and the CLAC , he puts his finger on it, he puts his finger on it in parentheses, it can't be invented, he puts his finger on it. Well, that’s a bit like the story of the owl.
Except that simple reasoning will not allow you to put your finger on it, in addition to reasoning, you have to be able to imagine what I call this pirate trick, although Max said that there is no cliché pirate or whatever, from the moment we come across a trick which consists of saying to find the exact point where the countermark is buried, you have to show imagination, so you have to know something that allows you to …we are completely into tricks that I call pirate tricks. A little trick that allows you to find the precise point, by engaging in intellectual gymnastics and with cleverness, with the right find, et cetera.
So that's what we have to do but we're really on this point, we're still at a moment where it's not worth going for miles and doing dozens of holes , if your great solution can be modified, adapted, adapted, etc., it is not good. The real great solution, once you're on it, there is no possible way, it's this one and not any other.