At the highest level of imagination engagement, we become driven to leverage our imagination into creative or innovative results with measurable practices.
Imagination is the seed to grow innovation. An open mind leads to imagination, and imagination leads to discovery. Discovery is both an event and a process. So embracing the world by “transcending over mountains and oceans” suggests a fusion of inner transformation, broad perspective, and concrete ways to know what we value.
Here is a conceptual framework for innovative problem solving: three modes (Transcend, Embrace, Measure), each with principles, practices, and simple metrics.
Transcend — widen perspective; move beyond narrow frames
Purpose: Break out of parochial thinking (local, short-term, self-only) so decisions reflect planetary scale and deeper meaning.
Practices:
-Field immersion: travel, or virtual exchanges across ecosystems, cultures, and disciplines to see different ways of living and solving problems.
-Boundary-crossing learning: read ecologies, histories, and futures; combine science, art, and lived knowledge.
-Reflection activities: regular solitude (walks, retreats) to verify assumptions and reframe purpose.
Simple measures:
-Diversity of exposure index: count distinct ecosystems/cultures engaged in an ecosystem environment (mountain, coastal, urban, rural).
-Perspective-change reflections: number of documented reframes of a problem after immersion or dialogue.
-Embrace — connect compassionately; include multiple voices and values.
-Purpose: Build empathy, mutuality, and care across social and ecological boundaries so actions are not extractive.
Practices:
-Participatory processes: co-design with communities, Indigenous custodians, and marginalized groups; practice active listening.
-Storywork and translation: surface narratives (oral histories, place stories) and translate them into policy, design, or creative forms.
-Reciprocity protocols: design benefits-sharing, capacity building, and long-term relationships rather than one-off interventions.
Simple measures:
-Representation metric: percent of decisions/projects that included co-design with affected stakeholders.
-Reciprocity score: number of projects with explicit benefit-sharing agreements or sustained capacity commitments.
-Measure — make values legible with appropriate instruments
-Purpose: Translate qualitative insights and ethical commitments into useful indicators that guide action without flattening meaning.
Practices:
-Multi-dimensional indicator sets: couple quantitative (biophysical, socioeconomic) with qualitative (narratives, wellbeing) metrics.
-Place-based dashboards: localize indicators (watershed health, food sovereignty, cultural continuity) rather than one-size-fits-all global metrics.
-Mixed-method monitoring: regular quantitative monitoring plus participatory storytelling and ethnographic updates.
Putting the three together — a cycle
Journey: Transcend (see broadly) → Embrace (co-create locally and ethically) → Measure (track plural indicators) → Reflect → Repeat.
Our knowledge is always based on what's known. It's information that's been discovered. However, in order to take any entity to a new place, imagination has to be exercised to uncover and create something new. At the highest level of imagination engagement, we become driven to leverage our imagination into creative or innovative results with measurable practices.




