Is anything truly new, or are we merely remixing the echoes of the past?
From fashion to business and art, it feels like every novel idea has a familiar echo, of something that came before. Every idea stands on the shoulders of older concepts, and every invention reimagines past creations. But does this mean thereโs no true originality? Or does it reveal a deeper truth how ideas evolve and re-invent themselves?
Consider fashion, where every decade brings a revival of an era. The 90s are having a momentโcargo pants, chokers, and crop tops are back. Packaged as something new. But are they really โback,โ or did they ever leave?
Fashion, like language, is a living, breathing storyline that we collectively write. When designers bring back bell-bottom jeans or retro jackets, theyโre not necessarily trying to rehash the past. Theyโre looking to the familiar for comfort and continuity while covering with new materials, cuts, and cultural significance. Changing fashions let each generation reimagine and reinterpret an eraโs style, giving it new energy while paying deference to the gone by.
Like the designer Coco Chanel said, โFashion changes, but style endures.โ The innovations might lie in the details, the way each piece fits into todayโs society, culture, and technology. The broader story of clothing is the sameโidentity, self-expression, communityโwhich each generation tells it in its way.
Storytelling, from ancient myths to todayโs blockbusters, might be the most obvious example of the paradox of originality. Think of Joseph Campbellโs The Hero with a Thousand Faces, a book that describes the โheroโs journey.โ Nearly every story across time and cultures follows a common arc. A hero ventures out, faces adversity, overcomes trials, and returns transformed. Star Wars, Harry Potter, and The Odyssey, The Ramayanaโare all rooted in the same ancient narrative structure.
But the twist is that while the plot skeleton may be the same, the specificsโthe characters, the settings, the voicesโbring infinite variations. J.K. Rowling reimagined the heroโs journey in the halls of a magical boarding school, while George Lucas took it to a galaxy far, far away. By infusing old tropes with new cultural influences, settings, and details, creators make something that feels both timeless and uniquely fresh.
This is the true power behind generative AIโits ability to make the old new again. By reconstituting existing knowledge, language, and images into fresh patterns, it transforms what is familiar into something original, relevant, and alive for the present moment. In doing so, Gen AI becomes less an inventor of the unprecedented than a re-inventor of tradition.
Business innovation might seem like the land of ground-breaking new ideas. But dig deeper, and youโll often find that the seeds of todayโs start-ups and breakthroughs were planted decades or even centuries ago. The iPhone was revolutionary, yes, but the technology it drew on was a culmination of innovations dating back to telegraphs, early computers, and the pioneering dreams of people like Nikola Tesla and Alan Turing.
Consider how many โnewโ business models are simply re-interpretations. The sharing economy that gave rise to Uber and Airbnb is just an updated version of ancient trade systems and the barter economy, updated with the power of mobile technology. Teslaโs cars may seem futuristic, but theyโre built on principles pioneered by the likes of Ferdinand Porsche, who invented the first hybrid car over a century ago.
These so-called โnewโ ideas draw their strength from history. Each entrepreneur may be remixing old concepts, but in layering them with the tech, culture, and resources of today, theyโre creating something that feels both familiar and transformative. In this sense, the question isnโt so much whether an idea is truly new, but rather how the past is re-envisioned to meet the needs of the present. Greek gods became modern superheroes. Norse legends inspired characters like Thor in the Marvel universe. The fascination with these mythic figures remains, but we bring them into the 21st century with contemporary issues, values, and challenges. Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman wrestle with similar themes of power, justice, and moral ambiguity, making ancient ideas accessible and relevant to a new audience.
Originality isnโt about forsaking the past. Itโs about infusing it with our present insights, shaping it through our unique perspectives, and finding new connections. Architects might use age-old materials like timber and stone, but they design shapes that echo modern values and environmental awareness. Musicians sample and remix previous hits, adding contemporary lyrics or beats to make an old song resonate with todayโs listeners.
Perhaps our greatest innovation is not the creation of something entirely new but our ongoing ability to reinvent, reframe, and reimagine. And in doing so, we transform the ancient stories into something that, for each of us, feels entirely our own.
Narain Batra lives in Hartford.
