optional-skills/creative/creative-ideation/references/methods/lateral-provocations.md
Edward de Bono, 1967–. The PO operator and five provocation moves for breaking pattern lock-in. PO is a linguistic marker that flags a statement as a deliberate provocation, not a claim — to be taken seriously even when implausible.
1. Escape (negation). Take something normally true of the system; negate it.
2. Reversal. Reverse a relationship.
3. Exaggeration. Push a parameter to extreme.
4. Distortion. Change order, location, or relationship of components.
5. Wishful thinking. State an impossible outcome.
Example. Problem: my CLI is hard to discover. Random word: "lighthouse".
Result: the CLI should signal danger when about to do something irreversible. Concrete, useful, not obvious from inside the original frame.
Two operators on the same problem. Intersection often more interesting than either alone. Example: Escape ("po: meetings don't have agendas") + Reversal ("po: attendees set the agenda after the meeting") → an asynchronous "what we ended up discussing" doc, written collectively after the fact.
Source: de Bono, Lateral Thinking (Harper, 1970); Po: Beyond Yes and No (Penguin, 1972).