Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - An example of reverse thinking

An example of reverse thinking

1, Sima Guang smashed the cylinder

When someone falls into the water, the conventional thinking mode is to "save people from the water", but Sima Guang used reverse thinking in the face of emergency and danger, decisively smashed the water tank with stones, "let the water leave people" and saved his friend's life.

2. Law of electromagnetic induction

From 65438 to 0820, Oster, a professor of physics at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, obtained the magnetic effect of current through many experiments. After this discovery spread to the European continent, it attracted many people to participate in the study of electromagnetism. Faraday, a British physicist, repeated Oster's experiment with great interest. Sure enough, as long as the wire is electrified, the magnetic needle near the wire will deflect immediately, and he is deeply attracted by this strange phenomenon.

3. Benefits

A person deposits money at night. It happened that the ATM machine broke down and 10 thousand yuan was swallowed. He immediately contacted the bank and was told to wait until dawn. He racked his brains and suddenly had a brainwave. He called customer service with a public phone, saying that the ATM machine vomited 3000 yuan more, and the maintenance staff arrived five minutes later.

Others don't help you because they don't touch his interests. Try to link your problem with his interests and make the other party pay attention to it.

Step 4 use

A canteen has a bad benefit because of the serious waste of customers. The restaurant couldn't stipulate who wasted food and fined ten yuan, so the business plummeted. Later, someone raised the price by 10 yuan, and the regulation was changed to: whoever does not waste food will be rewarded with 10 yuan! Therefore, business is booming and wasteful behavior is put an end to. Don't let customers "suffer", but let them take advantage.

Step 5 buy food

Grandpa bought tomatoes, picked three and put them on the scale. The stall owner weighed them: "1.5 Jin, 3 yuan and 7 yuan". Grandpa: "You don't need so much to make soup." Take off the biggest tomato, and the stall owner said, "two pounds, three pieces." Just when I wanted to remind my uncle to pay attention to the scale, he calmly took out 70 cents, picked up the big tomato that had just been taken away, and turned around and left.