George M. Prince
George Mather Prince (April 5, 1918 – June 9, 2009)[1] was an American author and the co-creator of synectics with William J. J. Gordon.
Prince was born in Richmond, New York[2] to Howard Prince, a surgeon, and Marguerite Prince. He grew up in Rochester, New York and attended Phillips Exeter Academy and Williams College. He joined the Arthur D. Little Consulting Company when he heard about the creativity experiments going on there.
George Prince died in Weston, Massachusetts at the age of 91.[3]
Works
Books
- The Practice of Creativity: A Manual for Dynamic Group Problem-Solving. George M. Prince, 2012, Vermont: Echo Point Books & Media, ISBN 978-0963878489
- The Practice of Creativity. George M. Prince, 1970, New York: Collier Books, Div. of Macmillan Publishing, Co. Inc.
- Mindspring! George M. Prince, Private printing, Copyright 1980
- Your Life is a Series of Meetings - Get a Good Life George M. Prince with Kathleen Logan-Prince, 2002 1st Books Library, www.1stbooks.com
- Culture and Creativity, George M. Prince, working manuscript, 2003
- Managing the Field, George M. Prince, workshop manual, 1988
- Mind-Free Program - Player/Coach Manual George M. Prince, 1988
- An Experiment to Examine and Reduce Self-Punishment George M. Prince, unpublished manuscript, 1988
Articles
- "How to Be a Better Meeting Chairman," Harvard Business Review, Jan. 1969.
- "Synectics: Twenty-five Years of Research into Creativity and Group Process," American Society for Training and Development,1982.
- "Synectics Group Planning and Problem-Solving Methods in Engineering," John Wiley & Sons,1982.
- "Recognizing Genuine Teamwork," Supervisory Management, April 1989.
- "Creative Meetings Through Power Sharing," Harvard Business Review, July 1, 1972.
- "Mindspring: Suggesting Answers to Why Productivity is Low," Chem Tech, May 1976.
- "Creativity and Learning As Skills, Not Talents," The Philips-Exeter Bulletin,June - July 1980.
- "Creativity, Self and Power," Perspectives in Creativity, edited by Irving A. Taylor & J.W. Getzels, Aldine Publishing Company, Chicago, 1975.
- "Training Both Sides of the Brain to Work Together," Training/HRD magazine *"Liberating Creativity and Learning," Chapter in Creative Education: Educating a Nation of Innovators, V.C. Nolan, editor, Synectics Education Initiative, Stoke Mandeville
gollark: I mean, mercury is toxic, actually, but still.
gollark: I'm not sure why you would particularly want to smuggle mercury on anyway. I don't see why it'd do much.
gollark: I doubt it's particularly secret if random TSA people know about it, but enjoy.
gollark: Stuff like the proof of Fermat's last theorem required connecting together a bunch of disconnected-looking areas of maths in very clever ways. There's more to that than just "practice", by most definitions of practice.
gollark: If you want to solve "the most difficult solvable equation in the world" you're probably going to have to come up with a lot of new techniques.
References
- U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014
- New York State, Birth Index, 1881-1942
- Obituary of George Prince in The Boston Globe
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