Atomic Note

Spontaneous tool use requires knowing both the tool and its target independently

spontaneous cognitionlearningintelligencetool usecognitive scienceprior knowledge

You can't combine two things into a novel solution if you only know one of them. The "click" of insight isn't generated fresh -- it's assembled from what's already stored. Knowing a tool exists doesn't tell you what it reaches. Knowing a target is reachable doesn't tell you what to use. Both representations have to be present, independently, before the connection can form.

A bee study demonstrated this cleanly. Researchers put bees into three conditions: familiar with both the ball (tool) and flower (target), familiar with only one, or familiar with neither. Only bees who knew both solved the task spontaneously. The two groups missing either piece were stuck -- not from lack of ability, but lack of inventory.

The implication: raw cleverness has a prerequisite. Spontaneous problem-solving of this kind operates on prior knowledge, not on raw intelligence. The person who sees the solution first isn't necessarily smarter -- they're more likely the one who already knew both pieces independently.

both tool + target known
can spontaneously combine them into a solution
only one known
cannot generate the solution
neither known
cannot generate the solution

Source claim: Spontaneous insight requires prior independent knowledge of both the tool and the target; having only one is not enough to generate the solution.