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by johnisgood 228 days ago
I agree. The brain works in mysterious ways.

I remember playing a logic game which required lots of thinking to solve it. Then at some point I stopped trying to actively solve it, I just simply stared at the game without trying to solve it, and after a while I tried to solve it. Guess what? I solved it at first attempt, without knowing how! This was really curious and it made me excited so I tried to keep doing it this way and turns out it was not a fluke, this method seemed to work consistently.

I did some research on it and this phenomenon is called "incubation" which is a core concept in the psychology of creativity and problem solving. Apparently it's frequently observed in puzzles, mathematical problems, and design tasks that require restructuring rather than mere computation.

In your case, conscious and effortful thinking can lead to functional fixedness or mental set, where you become stuck on an unproductive strategy, so taking a break allows these rigid patterns to weaken, making space for more flexible or creative approaches.

1 comments

(for those interested in reading more about this...)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incubation_(psychology)

    In psychology, incubation refers to the unconscious processing of problems, when they are set aside for a period of time, that may lead to insights. It was originally proposed by Graham Wallas in 1926 as one of his four stages of the creative process: preparation, incubation, illumination, and verification. Incubation is related to intuition and insight in that it is the unconscious part of a process whereby an intuition may become validated as an insight. Incubation substantially increases the odds of solving a problem, and benefits from long incubation periods with low cognitive workloads.