CONCEPT
Honor Thy Error as a Hidden Intention
The most famous of <em>Eno's</em> Oblique Strategies — a prescription for treating mistakes not as failures to be corrected but as signals of intentions the conscious mind did not recognize.
Honor thy error as a hidden intention is the most widely quoted of Brian Eno's Oblique Strategy cards and the most concise statement of his creative epistemology. The instruction reframes the error as information: a signal that the practitioner intended something she did not consciously recognize, and that the mistake has made the hidden intention visible. The error is not a failure of execution. It is a message from the territory beyond the plan. The principle provides the structural framework for understanding how to work with AI's unexpected outputs, confident fabrications, and productive stupidities — treating the machine's errors not as problems to be eliminated but as information to be examined.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The principle emerged from Eno's studio practice across the 1970s, in which he discovered repeatedly that the most valuable moments on a recording were the ones no one had planned. The tape running backward that revealed a phrase more interesting than the original. The