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But at least one project stops Mr. Brain, 40, from fidgeting: the act of taking something apart.
The good kind is about taking something apart – a computer, a line of code, a set of data – and rebuilding it, hopefully making it better, giving it a new function, or just doing something surprising and disruptive.
Additionally, teaching is inherently an analytical activity - taking something apart to show the various strands of thought and technique and how it all works -- whereas creating is a synthetic process, pulling a number of different ideas together.
Similar(57)
"Three Star can take something apart and put it back in a day or two".
Mr. Lindelof said he could see why these fan-created re-edits would appeal to people who "like to take something apart and put it back together".
He has stocky fingers that twitch sometimes when he talks, as if he were itching to take something apart, and his posture is slightly stooped, as if from years of leaning over a workbench.
I mean, who doesn't want to take something apart to see what makes it work?
CG: Did you ever take something apart that you couldn't get back together?
Spruston says that the postdocs he hires generally aren't afraid to take something apart and reassemble it, or write their own software rather than using off-the-shelf solutions.
There will always be that subset of kids who go out of their way to take something apart and try to understand how it works, but a vast majority of them just need to be presented with the opportunity.
And if you take something out, it falls apart.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com