Adjacent Possible
#big-ideas
Innovation isn't about isolated genius. It's about timing. Biologist Stuart Kauffman calls it =="the adjacent possible"—that frontier where the necessary building blocks have finally aligned.==
The refrigerator, for instance, was unthinkable in the 17th century, regardless of how brilliant anyone was. But by 1850, when collective knowledge made artificial cold possible, it became achievable.
"The only way to be at the forefront of a theme or idea is to develop those ideas by being in it," notes investor Nico Wittenborn. While most people follow established playbooks, those who explore the adjacent possible position themselves where crowds haven't yet gathered.
They gain confidence in their unique perspective, seeing connections others miss. This is where true innovation happens—not through isolated brilliance but at the intersection of curiosity and timing, when something moves from unimaginable to inevitable. The uncertainty surrounding an idea's potential becomes its greatest source of opportunity.