From skills-for-humanity
Apply Edward de Bono's Provocation Operation (Po) to generate new ideas from deliberately absurd statements. Breaks out of conventional thinking when stuck or needing radical creativity.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:s4h-creativity-provocationThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
You are facilitating a Po (Provocation Operation) session using Edward de Bono's technique. Po is one of the most radical and misunderstood tools in lateral thinking. Understanding why it works is essential to using it well.
You are facilitating a Po (Provocation Operation) session using Edward de Bono's technique. Po is one of the most radical and misunderstood tools in lateral thinking. Understanding why it works is essential to using it well.
A provocation is a statement that is deliberately wrong, impossible, or absurd — not because we believe it, but because holding it temporarily in mind creates a different vantage point. The word "Po" is a signal that a statement is being used as a movement tool, not as a truth claim. "Po: cars have square wheels" does not mean anyone thinks cars should have square wheels. It means: from this vantage point, what can we see?
The key insight: when we encounter an absurd statement without evaluating it for truth, we are forced to follow its implications. And those implications sometimes lead somewhere genuinely new that no amount of reasonable thinking would have found.
The critical discipline: Do not evaluate the provocation. Do not defend it or attack it. Use it as a springboard. The provocation is scaffolding — you extract what it reveals, then leave it behind.
If the user provides a provocation (prefixed with "Po:"): Go directly to Step 3 with their provocation.
If the user provides a problem or situation:
Step 1: Generate provocations Create 3–5 provocations for the user's situation. Each should:
Label each with "Po:" to signal its status.
Framing check: Confirm the specific challenge before continuing. State what you've identified — the actual problem or situation being provoked, and what assumptions seem most constraining — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Step 2: Select the most generative
Before narrowing: Show the complete set of generated provocations to the user first. Use AskUserQuestion:
Choose the 1–2 provocations most likely to produce interesting movement. Briefly note why — which assumption does each one destabilize?
Step 3: Extract movement from the provocation
For each selected provocation, work through it using these movement methods. You don't need to use all of them — use whichever produce genuine insight:
Step 4: Land somewhere real From the movement above, identify 1–3 candidate ideas — genuinely new directions suggested by following the provocation. These should be ideas that could actually be pursued, even if they feel unconventional.
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences — what is being analyzed and what the core question is — then ask:
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Provocations Po: [statement] Po: [statement] ...
Working the provocation: [selected Po]
Movement paths:
Candidate ideas that emerged:
The value of Po is not in the provocation itself — it's in the movement it forces. A good provocation session produces ideas that feel like they came from somewhere unexpected. If the candidate ideas could have been reached by normal reasoning, the provocation wasn't used as a movement tool — it was just decoration.
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/s4h-creativity-lateral-thinking — Use the provocation's directions as lateral move inputs/s4h-decision-option-mapping — Map which real-world options the provocation suggested/s4h-creativity-alternatives — Generate alternatives from the provocation's directionnpx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityRoutes to the right creative thinking technique based on your situation. Use when stuck, need fresh ideas, or want to think differently.
Generates divergent ideas for achieving goals via parallel brainstormers using first-principles, working-backwards, analogical, and other techniques. Validates assumptions first; outputs idea catalog only—no code or artifacts.
Applies structured ideation methods like SCAMPER, TRIZ, Six Thinking Hats, and Biomimicry to generate research ideas and explore interdisciplinary connections. Use for stuck problems, improvements, or contradictions.