Can innovation be taught and learned in a methodical manner? Can there be an innovation playbook using which, given a need to create a thing, product, or solve a complex problem, a set of well-defined steps be followed? How has Elon Musk been super successful time and again to create game-changing innovative products that created tremendous value for end-users and society at large? The answers to these questions can be found with a reasoning technique called first principles thinking.
First principles thinking is defined as a method of reasoning or a thought process in which you try and understand the fundamental truth regarding different aspects of the existence of a thing or problem by breaking it down into its most basic elements and building your argument up from there. These fundamental truths can be called the first principles or first causes.
The book, “First principles thinking – Building Winning Products Using First Principles Thinking“, is aimed to help you learn and implement first principles thinking using which you can build innovative products and solutions related to complex problems. The book represents concepts from Aristotle’s Metaphysics and Nyaya/Vaisheshika philosophy (Indian Philosophy). It will provide you with step-by-step methods for adopting this reasoning technique in your day-to-day work. You’ll be able to learn and use appropriate questioning techniques such as 5-whys, Cartesian method of doubt, and Socratic method to understand problems in a holistic manner and find creative solutions. You can start using this reasoning method in any area of your life including solving real-world problems.
The book introduces a methodology of breaking down the problems into their most basic elements or first causes and combining the basic elements in a creative manner to come up with innovation. This process is useful for business analysts, product managers, and entrepreneurs who are planning to innovate and launch new or enhanced products.
In this book, it will be shown how to use the first principles thinking from idea conception through the development and testing of a successful product. This approach will be aligned with the design thinking approach to help product managers adopt the practice from day one. It will also show that there is more than one way to solve any given problem by exploring different aspects of the situation before making a decision on which path to take. Here is a related post: First principles thinking explained with examples.
Reasoning by first principles helps acquire knowledge about a thing, a problem, or a product by breaking down a thing into its most basic elements called first causes or first principles. As per Aristotle’s Metaphysics, there are four causes that can be termed the first principles. These causes are the final cause, formal cause, material cause, and efficient cause. The final cause is about knowing the purpose that the things serve, the formal cause is about knowing the nature or idea of the thing, the material cause is about knowing the materials that make up the thing, and the efficient cause represents the entities that create the thing using material and formal causes. The concepts of the first causes and how they can be applied in relation to product development are discussed in the book.
The knowledge about first principles can be acquired through different means such as perception, inference, comparisons, and testimony. The goal is to know about the fundamental truth that forms the first principles. Questioning techniques such as the 5-whys, Cartesian method doubt, the Socrates method can prove to be very useful in arriving at the first principles. These questioning techniques have also been discussed in the book.
Simply speaking, first principles can be understood as individual, separable lego blocks. You can understand the first principles thinking as an approach to dismantling the existing lego blocks house, arriving at the first principles (first causes as individual lego blocks), and then building new and innovative houses by combining the first causes (lego blocks) in a unique manner. Here is a representative figure showcasing how the same lego blocks (material causes) when combined differently (efficient causes) result in houses of different sizes supposedly serving different purposes (final causes). This and several other examples have been explained in the book.
Here are the chapters that are covered in this book:
- Chapter 1: The cause-and-effect relationship
- What is the cause-and-effect relationship?
- Different types of effects
- Examples of cause-and-effect relationship
- Chapter 2: Introduction to first principles thinking
- Why reason from first principles?
- What is first principles thinking?
- First principles thinking concepts
- First principles analysis explained with an example
- Break down the problem or a thing into first principles
- Chapter 3: Use cases & examples
- Lego blocks & first principles
- Elon Musk’s rocket project
- Musicians & painters are first principles thinkers
- Chefs are first principles thinkers
- Chapter 4: Knowing first principles & questioning techniques
- What can be considered knowledge?
- Knowing a thing by knowing its first principles
- Means of acquiring knowledge about a thing
- Product innovation by acquiring product knowledge
- Questioning techniques
- 5-Whys
- Cartesian’s method of doubt
- Socratic method
- What can be considered knowledge?
- Chapter 5: Product innovation using first principles thinking
- What is a winning product?
- Method: Design thinking & first principles thinking
- Method: Acquire, Innovate, Actualize, Improve (AIAI) framework
If you would want to learn more about the topic in detail then you may order this book titled “First principles thinking – Building winning products using first principles thinking” from Amazon Kindle Store. I hope that with these insights, you will be able to innovate your next product offerings. Please feel free to drop a message and share your comments or feedback.
- Book: First principles thinking for building winning products - April 19, 2022
- Free AI / Machine Learning Courses at Alison.com - November 16, 2021
- 12 Weeks Free course on AI: Knowledge Representation & Reasoning (IIT Madras) - November 14, 2021
I found it very helpful. However the differences are not too understandable for me