Talk:De Bono Hats

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[edit] Biased

The example is biased pro-yellow, green and blue hats.

[edit] Why isn't it "de Bono Hats"?

Shouldn't all instances of "DeBono" in this entry be changed to "de Bono"? After all, his name is "Edward de Bono". I will change the entry, but I'm not sophisticated enough to create a new wiki entry ("de Bono Hats") and redirect to it. Could someone else do this? --Nick 12:18, 22 February 2007 (UTC)

[edit] In what way is this biased?

I don't see how this article is biased. Because the Blue Hat has more entries under the subheading? That doesn't define it as being biased seeing as the Blue Hat needs to represent more points in an argument as it is discussing "The Big Picture". By the way Nickg you can't doing it using the "move" page function. It replies with the message of the source and destination title being the same. Seeing as the actual content of the article is correct, the naming can't make a large difference. If it still bothers you, contact an administrator. Syphron12 20:27, 12 April 2007 (UTC)

The article doesn't present a neutral viewpoint. It isn't pure White Hat. In the first paragraph, everything after the first sentence may very well be true but it's somewhat irrelevant in terms of presenting information on Six Hats Thinking.There are several instances such as this where the viewpoint seems to slant towards yellow hat thinking in an effort to persuade others of the benefits of using the de Bono Hats parallel thinking framework. It's understandable that the author believes de Bono Hats is an idea worth putting in Wikipedia but the article needs to be more like:
de Bono Hats, more commonly known as "Six Hats" or "Six Thinking Hats" is a parallel thinking framework designed by Dr. Edward de Bono primarily for use by groups. It's the subject of his book, "Six Thinking Hats"....
It might not be a bad idea to request Dr. de Bono himself to contribute his best White Hat thinking on Six Thinking Hats since he has expressed concern about people using his ideas incorrectly.

136.159.208.39 14:59, 30 October 2007 (UTC)


There is a failure to adequately describe the role of the Blue Hat. It is strictly for "thinking about thinking". The role of the Blue hat is adopted by one person only at any time (like the meeting chairman) and determines the sequence of thinking under the other hats. In some ways the Six Hats are a reincarnation of earlier thinking tools devised by de Bono. The PMI (Plus Minus Interesting) tool from CoRT Thinking is similar: P = Yellow hat and M = Black hat. Red hat is emotion/gut feel/intuition. Green hat is creative thinking, and encompasses lateral thinking. White hat is just the facts or immutable and incontrovertible data. At no point does the article suggest the true value of the tool, that it is easy to categorize thinking under each of the hats. The ability to detect fundamental problems in the balance of thinking (eg. we do not have enough yellow hat on this subject) is one advantage. When a hat is announced (eg. give me your best green hat on the topic) it then opens up permission for contributions from multiple parties without fear of immediate reprisal - eg. a creative idea which is offered under the green hat cannot be criticized until black hat comments are invited. StephenSmith 15 April 2008. —Preceding comment was added at 12:36, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

[edit] TradeMark?

I have a bias against unsigned comments, especially negative ones. I would, however, like to ask about the TM superscript next to "Parallel Thinking". If I use the phrase "parallel processing", do I owe someone a royalty?

Ernstwll 19:08, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Why isn't it "Six Thinking Hats®" ?

Many people are more familiar with the phrase "Six Thinking Hats" since that is the term Mr. de Bono uses in his many books for this parallel thinking framework.It's the title of his book exclusively about it.Wouldn't it be better to use "Six Thinking Hats®" as the title so other people would be more likely to find it?

I know that Mr. de Bono has concerns regarding intellectual property matters but there is a point at which frequent emphasis on his ownership will have a negative effect on people choosing to use "de Bono thinking".

142.59.90.167 20:49, 24 October 2007 (UTC)

LAFFER spectramollisol@yahoo.com

[edit] Proposal to use de Bono Hats in this discussion

The current declared task is to work on this article so that the viewpoint is clearly neutral to anyone that reads it. Now, maybe this is something where vertical thinking is quite adequate but it might be interesting to use de Bono Hats as an editing group as an example of its use. It would involve some self discipline since anyone could at any time put on a different colored hat than the specific colored hat that is requested. There is also the problem of working out the Blue Hat details as a group since there could be editors that want to monopolize that hat.
There could be more Blue Hat discussion on how to get the required article. The comments so far seem to be Black Hat thinking which is ok, but let's have some more Blue Hat thinking as a fresh start.
I propose more Blue Hat thinking, then making a formal request for more Black Hat thinking and then asking for Green Hat Thinking.
The editing group doesn't have to set out a complete sequence of hats of how to get a neutral viewpoint article but something like Blue, Black, Green and an agreement on how to work together with the Blue Hat would be a start.
Another possible sequence might start with Yellow. It's good that the article exists and it does contain the basic elements of an explanation of what de Bono Hats are. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 136.159.208.39 (talk) 15:52, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Stub?

Without references, this article should be stubbed or deleted. I'm guessing that the topic is notable enough that it doesn't need to be deleted. --Ronz (talk) 17:38, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Drive by tagging

The article is multiple tagged, yet there are no discussions on the basis for these tags (notability, peacock etc). Until the antagonists can come up with a plausible argument I propose we just delete the tags. --11:57, 19 April 2008 (UTC)

The reasons (or basis) for those tags can be clearly seen in the actual article, if that makes sense. Joelster (talk) 22:35, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
That forces others to make unfounded assumptions, the starting point of many misunderstanding. In fact the box suggests or discuss these issues on the talk page. If people cannot clearly state their issues here I question the validity of their claims. As for notability the topic of the article is being discussed at LinkedIn as a tool for innovative processes. --12:48, 20 April 2008 (UTC)
Thanks for your input. I agree with you on the notability point - I think the de Bono Hats are notable enough to have an article. But the thing is that when you tag an article you do not neccesarily have to discuss it on the talk page. Remember that the purpose of the tags is to notify people that it needs improving. If you just look at the article you can clearly see that it contains peacock terms and is NPOV. It is also clear that it barely cites any sources and is written in an unencyclopedic manner. So the best thing to do is improve the article as the box says. Joelster (talk) 00:15, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
OK, so can we agree the notability tag goes? I am in favour of consensus rather than bold editing leading to revert wars. Next up is the peacock tag. from what I can see it is about statements such as many agree on X being great.... This article however is quite consistent in stating that it is De Bono who make the claims. Thus the reporting of his statements are objective while one may argue his opinions are subjective. Whether or not his statements hold true is an entirely different question. One could of course point out his web page listing endorsements from several notable companies (such as Nestlé) though that runs the risk of accusations of advertisement. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.164.186.113 (talk) 19:50, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Well, seeing as no one has objected, I yhave removed the notability and peacock term tags. But I still believe that the article is written ever-so-slightly like an advertisement for the Hats, and that the layout and content of the article is unencyclopedic. But the biggest problem of all is that it doesn't cite any sources; even though it does give a few references to books and external websites, these are not cited in the text. What is the address for his webpage? Perhpas there are a few statements I could cite from there. Joelster (talk) 22:35, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Tags removal is much appreciated. Next up is the advertising tag. Could you clarify how you see this as an advertisement? Personally had I paid for an ad like this I would have demanded my money back. You requested address for his web page, I believe it is http://www.debonoforbusiness.com/asp/six_hats.asp which is in the article. His web pages gives links (just not hyper links) to various persons in Nestlé and Washoe Health System but I am not sure how to add these without then making it look like a glowing recommendation. Links can be found in LinkedIn but URLs from there tends to be long, looking like containing session IDs. --22:02, 4 May 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.164.186.113 (talk)