The biggest surprise to me in this reading was the section which talked about the creation of ideas. Truthfully, I feel like a lot of what I'm reading goes in a circle. The author is repeating what they're saying but just trying to make it sound different. The creative process for entrepreneur's is something that shouldn't be underestimated and I appreciated learning more about what goes into this aspect.
2) Identify at least one part of the reading that was confusing to you.
I had trouble with the topic of entrepreneurial philosophy. While some of the benefits were listed I guess I have never considered that entrepreneurship could have its own philosophy. Additionally I'm not really sure of it's true purpose, this mindset can help you but I don't know how it was formed.
3) If you were able to ask two questions to the author, what would you ask? Why?
Who/what was the inspiration for entrepreneurial philosophy?
How can we encourage modern entrepreneurs to stray away from "The Most Common Killer Ideas?"
4) Was there anything you think the author was wrong about? Where do you disagree with what she or he said? How?
I don't think that the author was necessarily wrong about anything, but I disagree with parts where it mentioned the process of turning a good idea into a solution. I guess this leans on the principle that everyone has there own creative process, and mine maybe differs from the authors'.
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