However, “reimagining the world” is not only private inspiration—it is also persuasion. A clean-sheet design must be translated into language, prototypes, stories, and demonstrations that others can grasp. Thomas Kuhn’s *The Structure of Scientific Revolutions* (1962) shows how paradigm shifts spread when a community gradually adopts a new way of seeing what problems matter and what counts as a solution.
Thus, the visionary’s blank page becomes a shared document. What begins as solitary reframing turns into collective alignment, where new norms replace old ones because the new picture proves more coherent, useful, or compelling. [...]