Intuitive in India

I learned intuition in India: Steve Jobs told his biographer 
Yoshita Singh 

The seven months that Steve Jobs spent wandering in India in search of spiritual enlightenment were "not a waste of time", his biographer has said, with the late Apple co-founder telling him his time in India taught him "intuition".

Customers queue up to buy copies of the book Steve Jobs
Customers queue up to buy copies of the book Steve Jobs PHOTO: AFP

In an interview with the CBS, biographer Walter Isaacson says Jobs' design sense was greatly influenced by the "simplicities of Zen Buddhism." Isaacson's book Steve Jobs hit bookstores earlier this week.

In the 1970s, Jobs took leave from working as a technician at video games manufacturer Atari and spent seven months wandering across India looking for spiritual enlightenment.

"And it turned out not to be a waste of time," he says.

According to Isaacson, when Jobs returned from India he said, "The main thing I've learned is intuition, that the people in India are not just pure rational thinkers, that the great spiritual ones also have an intuition." Isaacson says that "the simplicities of Zen Buddhism really informed his (Jobs') design sense. "That notion that simplicity is the ultimate sophistication," the biographer says in the interview.

After returning from India, Jobs and his friend Steve Wozniak founded Apple computer in his parents' garage with an initial $ 1,300 investment.

When asked how Jobs, a hippie college dropout, goes to India and comes back deciding he wants to be a businessman, Isaacson says, "Jobs has within him sort of this conflict, but he doesn't quite see it as a conflict between being hippie-ish and anti-materialistic but wanting to sell things like Wozniak's board. Wanting to create a business. And I think that's exactly what Silicon Valley was all about in those days. Let's do a startup in our parents' garage and try to create a business."

According to another report, Jobs could be mean, abrasive and cuttingly dismissive of co-workers in his quest for perfectionism, says his biographer.

"He's not warm and fuzzy," Isaacson said in an interview with the CBS show 60 Minutes.

"He was very petulant," Isaacson said of Jobs, who died on October 5 at the age of 56. "He was very brittle. He could be very, very mean to people at times.

Job's quest for perfection came in part from his adopted father, Paul Jobs, who taught him "how to make great things," his
biographer said.

"Once they were building a fence. And he said, 'You got to make the back of the fence that nobody will see just as good looking as the front of the fence,'" he said. "That will show that you're dedicated to making something perfect.'"

"In fact, he could have been one of the world's worst managers," he said. "He was always, you know, upending things." — PTI, AFP





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