Chapter Three
Improvisation and Limitations
“I’ll play first, and I’ll tell you about it later. Maybe.”
Miles Davis
When we build, we take bits of others’ work and fuse them to our own choices to see if alchemy occurs. Some of those choices are informed by best practices and accrued wisdom; others are guided by the decisions of the work cited as inspiration; while a large number are shaped by the disposition and instincts of the work’s creator. These fresh contributions and transformations are the most crucial, because they continue the give-and-take of in sequence by adding new, diverse material to the pool to be used by others.
Happily, these materials do not behave like physical materials when they are shared, because they do not run out. Their properties are eloquently explained by eighteenth century haiku master Yosa Buson. Translated from Japanese, he wrote:
Lighting one candle with another candle— spring evening.
Buson is saying that we accept the light contained in the work of others without darkening their efforts. One candle can light another, and the light may spread without its source being diminished. We must sing in our own way, but with the contributions and in uence of others, we need not sing alone.
From The Shape of Design